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Johnnie Ray Seven Classic Albums Plus Bonus Singles (4-CD)

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(Real Gone Music) 90 tracksmore

Johnnie Ray: Seven Classic Albums Plus Bonus Singles (4-CD)

(Real Gone Music) 90 tracks

Article properties:Johnnie Ray: Seven Classic Albums Plus Bonus Singles (4-CD)

  • Interpret: Johnnie Ray

  • Album titlle: Seven Classic Albums Plus Bonus Singles (4-CD)

  • Genre Pop

  • Label Real Gone Music

  • Artikelart CD

  • EAN: 5036408165824

  • weight in Kg 0.3
Ray, Johnnie - Seven Classic Albums Plus Bonus Singles (4-CD) CD 1
01Don't Blame MeJohnnie Ray
02Walkin' My Baby Back HomeJohnnie Ray
03Don't Take Your Love From MeJohnnie Ray
04All Of MeJohnnie Ray
05Give Me TimeJohnnie Ray
06The Lady Drinks ChampagneJohnnie Ray
07Out In The Cold AgainJohnnie Ray
08Coffee And CigarettesJohnnie Ray
09Please Don't Talk About Me When I'm GoneJohnnie Ray
10Glad Rag DollJohnnie Ray
11A Hundred Years From TodayJohnnie Ray
12Somebody Stole My GalJohnnie Ray
13With These HandsJohnnie Ray
14Walkin' My Baby Back HomeJohnnie Ray
15As Time Goes ByJohnnie Ray
16Such A NightJohnnie Ray
17The Little White Cloud That CriedJohnnie Ray
18CryJohnnie Ray
19I'm Gonna Walk And Talk With My LordJohnnie Ray
Ray, Johnnie - Seven Classic Albums Plus Bonus Singles (4-CD) CD 2
01Pretty-Eyed BabyJohnnie Ray
02How Long, How Long BluesJohnnie Ray
03Sent For You YesterdayJohnnie Ray
04I'll Never Be FreeJohnnie Ray
05I'm Gonna Move To The Outskirts Of TownJohnnie Ray
06Shake A HandJohnnie Ray
07Lotus BlossomJohnnie Ray
08Every DayJohnnie Ray
09I Want To Be LovedJohnnie Ray
10I Miss You SoJohnnie Ray
11Trouble In MindJohnnie Ray
12So LongJohnnie Ray
13Should I?Johnnie Ray
14Shake A HandJohnnie Ray
15Ain't Misbehavin'Johnnie Ray
16As Time Goes ByJohnnie Ray
17Just Walking In The RainJohnnie Ray
18Yes Tonight, JosephineJohnnie Ray
19YesterdaysJohnnie Ray
20Up Above My Head, I Hear Music In The AirJohnnie Ray
21Don't Worry 'bout MeJohnnie Ray
22The Little White Cloud That Cried - CryJohnnie Ray
23I'm Gonna Walk And Talk With My LordJohnnie Ray
Ray, Johnnie - Seven Classic Albums Plus Bonus Singles (4-CD) CD 3
01It All Depends On YouJohnnie Ray
02My IdealJohnnie Ray
03Too Marvellous For WordsJohnnie Ray
04I'm Confessin'Johnnie Ray
05Teach Me TonightJohnnie Ray
06Nevertheless (I'm In Love With You)Johnnie Ray
07All Through The NightJohnnie Ray
08Hands Across The TableJohnnie Ray
09They Can't Take That Away From MeJohnnie Ray
10Day By DayJohnnie Ray
11I Can't Escape From YouJohnnie Ray
12I'm Beginning To See The LightJohnnie Ray
13Wagon WheelsJohnnie Ray
14Empty SaddlesJohnnie Ray
15Tumbling TumbleweedsJohnnie Ray
16The Last Round-UpJohnnie Ray
17Home On The RangeJohnnie Ray
18Bury Me Out On The Lone PrairieJohnnie Ray
19(When It's) Springtime In The RockiesJohnnie Ray
20Ridin' HomeJohnnie Ray
21Twilight On The TrailJohnnie Ray
22Red River ValleyJohnnie Ray
23I'm An Old CowhandJohnnie Ray
24Cool WaterJohnnie Ray
Ray, Johnnie - Seven Classic Albums Plus Bonus Singles (4-CD) CD 4
01A Sinner Am IJohnnie Ray
02A Hundred Years From TodayJohnnie Ray
03It's All In The GameJohnnie Ray
04September SongJohnnie Ray
05Don't Worry About MeJohnnie Ray
06Day By DayJohnnie Ray
07If I Had YouJohnnie Ray
08Tell The Lady I Said GoodbyeJohnnie Ray
09Give Me TimeJohnnie Ray
10Don't Leave Me NowJohnnie Ray
11All The WayJohnnie Ray
12LoveJohnnie Ray
13Tell The Lady I Said GoodbyeJohnnie Ray
14Whiskey And GinJohnnie Ray
15CryJohnnie Ray
16The Little White Cloud That CriedJohnnie Ray
17Please, Mr SunJohnnie Ray
18(Here I Am) Broken HeartedJohnnie Ray
19What's The Use?Johnnie Ray
20Mountains In The MoonlightJohnnie Ray
21Gee, But I'm LonesomeJohnnie Ray
22Don't Say Love Has EndedJohnnie Ray
23Faith Can Move MountainsJohnnie Ray
24Love Me (Baby Can't You Love Me)Johnnie Ray
Johnnie Ray Singer-pianist Johnnie Ray exploded onto the American pop music scene in late... more
"Johnnie Ray"

Johnnie Ray

Singer-pianist Johnnie Ray exploded onto the American pop music scene in late 1951 with Cry,a ballad given such an emotional and unorthodox treatment that it stunned the listening public,  and held down both the #1 and (with Ray's self-penned Little White Cloud That Cried as the flip) #2 spots on 'Billboard's' pop chart--a unique achievement. The 24 year old Oregon born Ray matched his unusual vocal approach with a wildly physical performing style that, as label-mate Tony Bennett said, "smashed all the rules." Not surprisingly, Ray had been discovered at a black R&B Mecca, the Flame Showbar in Detroit, where he'd insinuated himself after almost three years of thankless toil in the "upholstered sewers" (as Johnnie himself described them) of Los Angeles and the nightclubs, roadhouses, after-hours clubs and burlesque theaters of the Pacific Northwest.

Unconventional hardly began to describe Johnnie Ray; a hard-drinking, blues- shouting, piano-kicking, bisexual firebrand. Not only did Johnnie, in performance go absolutely ape--throwing himself onto the stage, writhing, gasping, gesturing wildly, wresting the microphone from its stand and racing back and forth with it, leaping from the stage into his audience (antics never before attempted by any performer, black or white), he also wore a hearing aid--the result of a 1940 blanket toss accident when members of his boy scout troupe accidentally dumped him onto the ground; a dry straw punctured the ear drum. The handicap, taken with all the rest of his wild presentation, qualified him as a freak, a big beat mutant who shocked and disturbed staid 1950s America. Barely recalled by the public today, Johnnie Ray was a crucial figure in pop music--the missing link between crooner Sinatra and rock 'n' roll idol Elvis Presley.

During his initial burst of fame, captivating not only the bobby sox set but also Manhattan's Cafe Society and beyond (everyone from Tallulah Bankhead to Salvador Dali to Noel Coward to Yul Brynner to Hank Williams Sr. proclaimed their adoration), Ray's manager Bernie Lang had aggressively capitalized on his property, re-negotiating Johnnie's contract with Okeh and later Columbia no less than three times and launching the first all-out merchandising scheme in pop music history: in 1952, Johnnie Ray bobbysox were selling at the rate of 30, 000 dozen pairs a week. There were Johnnie Ray Teardrop suits, sport shirts, ladies blouses, Cry-kerchiefs, folios, plans for a hand puppet--an endless and lucrative stream of products capitalizing on the Cry Guy's unexpected appeal.

Bernie Lang had good reason to exploit Ray as much as possible--the bottom could drop out any time. Within a week of signing his recording contract in April 1951, Johnnie had been arrested by an undercover vice officer in the mens' room of a Detroit burlesque house; charged with accosting and soliciting, Johnnie plead guilty, paid his fine and blithely went on to become the world's reigning international pop star (riots broke out everytime he toured Britain and Australia--his overseas fans were virtually uncontrollable). Even a high-profile but short-lived marriage to the daughter of legendary Sunset Strip showman Charlie Morrison, owner of the swank Mocambo, could not provide cover. When the debut issue of the notorious scandal magazine 'Confidential' appeared in 1953, Johnnie was on the cover, subject of a vicious character assassination that, almost miraculously, did not refer to the 1951 arrest. But Johnnie had a rogue-ish reputation--he'd also been arrested a number of other times since attaining fame, as a common drunk (passed out in an airport terminal) and a spectacular drunk and disorderly charge (roller skating through the lobby of a Minneapolis hotel, squirting guests with a water pistol).

Personally, Johnnie was a odd mixture of rural farmboy, high-camp gay blade, jazz-R&B philosopher and formal old school Tin Pan Alley entertainer. His degree of interest in men and women constantly shifted; after splitting with his wife Marilyn in 1953, he had started an ongoing relationship with a male model that lasted for some 7 or 8 years. But in 1956, male model or no, Johnnie began a torrid affair with 44 year old columnist, crime reporter and radio/television personality Dorothy Kilgallen. A powerful figure and veteran Hearst employee, Kilgallen was as famous as Johnnie; although she was married (with three children) the Ray-Kilgallen affair was one of Gotham's most open secrets. They did not just hide in plain sight, they flaunted it and necked outrageously, pawing each other like a pair of teenagers at tables in most of New York's top clubs. No one dared publicly speak or write of the affair--she was a fearsome adversary whom none would cross.

This was most fortuitous for the Cry Guy, whose career, since 'Confidential's' lurid expose, constantly vacillated between glory and scandal. As a result, Johnnie Ray's cachet was re-established and his romance had coincided with a renewed vigor, depth and skill in many of his records.

Back in the studio on March 17, 1957, Johnnie again plunged into the pop market with the whooping ebullience of Yes Tonight Josephine, the mind- bending overkill of Build Your Love (On A Strong Foundation) and gingerly strolled the dusty, Western-flavored Street of Memories. The next record date, May 26, 1957, produced two more slabs of pure 1950s pop: Miss Me Just a Little, the dizzying, god-awful Texas Tambourine, and Pink Sweater Angel, a weak attempt to rope in the sock hop crowd. But the last tune, Soliloquy Of A Fool,was an extraordinary, if not altogether unique, piece of work; eerie, dramatic, with weird percussion and a ghostly sounding organ. Johnnie's vocal is riveting, a performance of white-knuckled, teeth-grinding intensity.

He was riding so high, coming off his #2 hit, Just Walkin In the Rain,and the Top Ten follow-up You Don't Owe Me A Thing, that Johnnie decided he was going to get himself something really wonderful to celebrate his 31st birthday. He was going to buy back his hearing. Following rounds of consultation, he secretly entered a New York hospital and spent his birthday, January 10, 1958, undergoing surgery. The press was called in the following day. Propped up in bed, with a huge bandage wrapped around his head and a doting doe-eyed nurse melting beside him, Johnnie smiled for the photographers but did not answer any questions. He couldn't have--the operation was a flop. Doctors brainstormed, then suggested an immediate second go at it. Johnnie agreed. He went back for another attempt on January 12.

Two days later, in a special report headlined:"Johnnie Ray Ear Miracle Thrills New York," famed columnist Earl Wilson ballyhooed "the great good news that Johnnie Ray can hear after a second operation has Broadway again believing in miracles." By the second paragraph this cheery tone dwindled to more sober observations like "at least partly a success  it appears he is going to be able to hear." The basis of the story lay in the fact that Johnnie had detected a gust of wind vibrating the window pane next to his bed when Wilson dropped in. Earl was doing him a favor with the miracle angle.

While the first operation was a failure, the second was a disaster. The surgery completely eradicated what little remained of his left ear's hearing and diminished that in his good right ear by almost sixty percent. Happy Birthday. 

Johnnie Ray Yes Tonight Josephine (5-CD)

Read more at: https://www.bear-family.de/ray-johnnie-yes-tonight-josephine-5-cd.html
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