Hank Snow Singing Ranger Vol.2 (4-CD Deluxe Box Set)
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Hank Snow: Singing Ranger Vol.2 (4-CD Deluxe Box Set)
...picks up from 'I'm Moving On', and continues to 1958. During these years, Hank Snow became one of the standard-bearers of traditional country against the onslaught of rock 'n' roll. The hits grew fewer but the quality never slacked. The 112 tracks on this set feature Hank Snow's instrumental albums (including his duets with Chet Atkins), a rare single for the Canadian market (Squid Jiggin' Ground/New Blue Velvet Band), 23 previously unissued cuts, and unforgettable hits like Cryin' Prayin' Waitin' Hopin', I'm Movin' In, These Hands, Hula Rock, The Party Of the Second Part, and Big Wheels.
Article properties:Hank Snow: Singing Ranger Vol.2 (4-CD Deluxe Box Set)
Interpret: Hank Snow
Album titlle: Singing Ranger Vol.2 (4-CD Deluxe Box Set)
Genre Country
Label Bear Family Records
- Edition 2 Deluxe Edition
- Preiscode DH
Artikelart Box set
EAN: 4000127154767
- weight in Kg 1.2
Snow, Hank - Singing Ranger Vol.2 (4-CD Deluxe Box Set) Box set 1 | ||||
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01 | I've Forgotten You | Hank Snow | ||
02 | That Crazy Mambo Thing | Hank Snow | ||
03 | Let Me Go Lover | Hank Snow | ||
04 | The Old Spinning Wheel (& CHET ATKINS) | Hank Snow | ||
05 | Darktown Strutter's Ball (& CHET ATKINS) | Hank Snow | ||
06 | Silver Bell (& CHET ATKINS) | Hank Snow | ||
07 | Under The Double Eagle (& CHET ATKINS) | Hank Snow | ||
08 | It's You Only You, That... (& ANITA CARTER) | Hank Snow | ||
09 | Keep Your Promise, Willie Thomas (& CARTER) | Hank Snow | ||
10 | Cryin', Prayin', Waitin', Hopin' | Hank Snow | ||
11 | Someone Mentioned Your Name | Hank Snow | ||
12 | I'm Glad I Got To See You Once Again | Hank Snow | ||
13 | Mainliner | Hank Snow | ||
14 | Cuba Rhumba | Hank Snow | ||
15 | A Scale To Measure Love | Hank Snow | ||
16 | Blue Sea Blues | Hank Snow | ||
17 | Twelfth Street Rag | Hank Snow | ||
18 | Rainbow Boogie | Hank Snow | ||
19 | Vaya Con Dios | Hank Snow | ||
20 | Madison Madness | Hank Snow | ||
21 | Caribbean | Hank Snow | ||
22 | Can't Have You Blues | Hank Snow | ||
23 | Dog Bone | Hank Snow | ||
24 | Born To Be Happy | Hank Snow | ||
25 | The Golden Rocket | Hank Snow | ||
26 | Hobo Bill's Last Ride | Hank Snow | ||
27 | Stolen Moments | Hank Snow | ||
28 | Pray | Hank Snow | ||
29 | The Blind Boy's Prayer | Hank Snow |
Snow, Hank - Singing Ranger Vol.2 (4-CD Deluxe Box Set) Box set 2 | ||||
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01 | Conscience I'm Guilty | Hank Snow | ||
02 | Hula Rock | Hank Snow | ||
03 | Two Won't Care | Hank Snow | ||
04 | The Party Of The Second Part | Hank Snow | ||
05 | These Hands | Hank Snow | ||
06 | Reminiscin (& CHET ATKINS) | Hank Snow | ||
07 | New Spanish Two Step (& CHET ATKINS) | Hank Snow | ||
08 | In An 18th Century Drawing Room | Hank Snow | ||
09 | La Cucaracha | Hank Snow | ||
10 | Born To Lose | Hank Snow | ||
11 | I'm Movin' In | Hank Snow | ||
12 | Love's Call From The Mountain | Hank Snow | ||
13 | Sunrise Serenade | Hank Snow | ||
14 | El Rancho Grande | Hank Snow | ||
15 | Grandfather's Clock | Hank Snow | ||
16 | The Lover's Farewell | Hank Snow | ||
17 | Carnival Of Venice | Hank Snow | ||
18 | Old Doc Brown | Hank Snow | ||
19 | That Pioneer Mother Of Mine | Hank Snow | ||
20 | Lazy Bones | Hank Snow | ||
21 | What Do I Know Today | Hank Snow | ||
22 | Trouble, Trouble, Trouble | Hank Snow | ||
23 | The First Nighters | Hank Snow | ||
24 | How To Play The Guitar | Hank Snow | ||
25 | Little Britches | Hank Snow | ||
26 | What Is Father | Hank Snow | ||
27 | Horses Prayer | Hank Snow |
Snow, Hank - Singing Ranger Vol.2 (4-CD Deluxe Box Set) Box set 3 | ||||
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01 | Loose Talk | Hank Snow | ||
02 | I Almost Lost My Mind | Hank Snow | ||
03 | Sing Me A Song Of The Islands | Hank Snow | ||
04 | Memories Are Made Of This | Hank Snow | ||
05 | These Tears Are Not For You | Hank Snow | ||
06 | Singing The Blues | Hank Snow | ||
07 | My Life With You | Hank Snow | ||
08 | Poison Love | Hank Snow | ||
09 | Among My Souvenirs | Hank Snow | ||
10 | Born To Lose | Hank Snow | ||
11 | It's Been So Long Darling | Hank Snow | ||
12 | La Paloma | Hank Snow | ||
13 | Oh Wonderful World | Hank Snow | ||
14 | Chant Of The Wanderer | Hank Snow | ||
15 | I Really Don't Want To Know | Hank Snow | ||
16 | Squid Jiggin' Ground | Hank Snow | ||
17 | The New Blue Velvet Band | Hank Snow | ||
18 | Calypso Sweetheart | Hank Snow | ||
19 | I'm Hurtin' All Over | Hank Snow | ||
20 | My Memory | Hank Snow | ||
21 | The Party Of The Second Part | Hank Snow | ||
22 | Marriage And Divorce | Hank Snow | ||
23 | Unfaithful | Hank Snow | ||
24 | Tangled Mind | Hank Snow | ||
25 | My Arms Are A House | Hank Snow | ||
26 | Love's Call From The Mountain | Hank Snow | ||
27 | I Traded Love | Hank Snow |
Snow, Hank - Singing Ranger Vol.2 (4-CD Deluxe Box Set) Box set 4 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
01 | Big Wheels | Hank Snow | ||
02 | A Woman Captured Me | Hank Snow | ||
03 | I Heard My Heart Break Last Night | Hank Snow | ||
04 | I Wish I Was The Moon | Hank Snow | ||
05 | My Lucky Friend | Hank Snow | ||
06 | Whispering Rain | Hank Snow | ||
07 | I'm Hurtin' All Over | Hank Snow | ||
08 | My Memory | Hank Snow | ||
09 | I'm Here To Get My Baby Out Of Jail | Hank Snow | ||
10 | Don't Make Me Go To Bed And I'll Be Good | Hank Snow | ||
11 | The Convict And The Rose | Hank Snow | ||
12 | There's A Little Box Of Pine In The 7:29 | Hank Snow | ||
13 | Put My Little Shoes Away | Hank Snow | ||
14 | The Letter Edged In Black | Hank Snow | ||
15 | Old Shep | Hank Snow | ||
16 | Prisoner's Prayer | Hank Snow | ||
17 | A Drunkard's Child | Hank Snow | ||
18 | Little Buddy | Hank Snow | ||
19 | Nobody's Child | Hank Snow | ||
20 | Under The Double Eagle | Hank Snow | ||
21 | Blue Danube Waltz | Hank Snow | ||
22 | Waltz, Kitty Waltz | Hank Snow | ||
23 | Brahm's Lullaby (without echo) | Hank Snow | ||
24 | Sleepy Rio Grande | Hank Snow | ||
25 | Brahm's Lullaby (with echo) | Hank Snow |
Hank Snow
Before 22-year-old Hank Snow auditioned at the Montreal offices of RCA Victor's Canadian Division in October 1936, Repertoire and Recording Manager A.H. 'Hugh' Joseph asked if he had any original songs. "Friends, I told him a little white lie," Snow recalled in his 1994 autobiography. "I said yes, I have two good songs that I have just written."
Giving the budding recording artist the address of an old church RCA was temporarily using as a studio, Joseph told him to appear there at 2 p.m. tomorrow. Although elated by this opportunity, Snow now worried about those two non-existent originals he promised to have ready. Returning to his hotel room, he wrote a Jimmie Rodgers pastiche titled Lonesome Blue Yodel and a convoluted ballad about a cowboy singer turned outlaw. While no lyrical masterpiece, Prisoned Cowboy became an auspicious start to a recording career stretching across six decades. It also reflected Snow's lifelong fascination with the American and Canadian West – romantic places he only dreamed about during his Nova Scotia childhood.
At age 12 Snow escaped an abusive stepfather's wrath by signing on as a cabin boy on a fishing schooner. For the next four years, the slight-statured youth endured grueling conditions in the North Atlantic. On his occasional visits home, he'd wind up his mother's Victrola and repeatedly play Vernon Dalhart's The Prisoner's Song and The Wreck Of The Old 97. Eventually resettling with his sister and her husband in Bluerocks, Nova Scotia, Snow bought his first guitar. Now drawn to the blue yodels of Jimmie Rodgers, he mastered the Singing Brakeman's songs and style.
Prisoned Cowboy and Lonesome Blue Yodel sold enough copies to merit a second session. By now Snow concentrated on songwriting, many of his lyrics built upon sentimental Western themes. Early songs like We Met Down In The Hills Of Old Wyoming, I'll Ride Back To Lonesome Valley and There's A Picture On Pinto's Saddle hardly compared with the vivid Western sagas of Bob Nolan or Stuart Hamblen, but they helped establish a following for 'Hank, The Yodeling Ranger.' The Texas Cowboy, recorded in February 1939, was one of Snow's livelier early efforts. Its spoken introduction gives us an idea of Snow's formative broadcasts on Canadian radio.
Snow's ten sessions for Canadian RCA through 1947 included at least one song about Texas or the open range. Not all were written by the singer. Snow learned Bobby Gregory's Riding Along, Singing A Song from a Decca 78 by Denver Darling. Philadelphia promoter and song publisher Jack Howard gave him Tom Grindhart's Blue Ranger. Howard, one of the first Americans to champion Snow's career, booked him into several Philadelphia-area venues during July 1944. He also brought the singer to Wheeling to meet Harry 'Big Slim' McAuliffe, who offered to help Snow land a slot on WWVA's Midnight Jamboree.
Realizing his career could only go so far in Canada, Snow moved to Wheeling. As he did with many other young talents, McAuliffe worked tirelessly on Snow's behalf. Besides bringing him to WWVA, McAuliffe outfitted Snow with the essentials for a traveling stage show, including a trained horse. For the next four years Snow and his troupe zigzagged across the border. But despite his high visibility and popularity in his home country, Snow found it difficult to get any real foothold in America. Hugh Joseph lobbied RCA Victor's New York office to release his best-selling couplings in the United States. Label officials weren't interested, even though a few resourceful American country disc jockeys spun his Canadian Bluebird records to good listener response.
In January 1948 the American Federation of Musicians forbade its members to make recordings. Desperate to maintain a release schedule through the year, RCA Victor turned to Snow's Canadian masters. My Sweet Texas Bluebonnet Queen was released that April, followed two months later by Brand On My Heart. Dallas disc jockey Hal Horton turned Brand On My Heart into a local hit. Its success led Snow to abandon his futile attempt to break into Hollywood; he arrived in Dallas early that fall, his trained horse in tow and only eleven dollars in his pocket.
Joining KRLD's new live showcase Big-D Jamboree, Snow drew sizable crowds in clubs and concerts, but financially these proved to be lean months. Ernest Tubb, himself a Texas expatriate, convinced Snow that Nashville was the place he needed to be.
RCA Victor issued three more Canadian couplings by 'Hank, The Singing Ranger' before the musician's union settled its dispute with the record companies. Though none were national hits, all sold well enough to merit Snow's first American session in March 1949. Eight songs were recorded in Chicago, and Jenny Lou Carson's Marriage Vow became a modest chart success. It gave Tubb enough leverage to bring his friend to Nashville and the Grand Ole Opry roster.
Using Tubb's Texas Troubadours for his initial Opry appearances in January 1950, Snow eventually recruited a young, top-flight band, including steel player Joe Talbot and fiddler Tommy Vaden. "Together they created exactly what I wanted for the Hank Snow sound,” he wrote. He brought both musicians to his next RCA Victor session on March 28, 1950. Augmented by Velma Williams on rhythm guitar and Ernie Newton on bass, they recorded four songs including a two-year-old Snow original, I'm Moving On. Released the following month, it stayed on 'Billboard's' country charts for 44 weeks, 21 of them at #1. Snow's next two singles, The Golden Rocket and The Rhumba Boogie, also had lengthy chart runs, both peaking at #1.
Snow also began recording 16" discs for radio stations subscribing to RCA's Thesaurus Transcription Service. Compared to his hit-driven singles, these casually produced transcriptions revealed the scope of Snow's working repertoire. Five Western-themed tracks from these discs appear here: Stuart Hamblen's Texas Plains, Jimmie Rodgers' Yodeling Ranger, Bob Wills' San Antonio Rose, Bob Nolan's Chant Of The Wanderer and a medley of Gene Austin's I'm Coming Home and...
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