Conway Twitty Six Classic Albums Plus Singles (4-CD)
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- catalog number: CDRGM055
- weight in Kg 0.19
Conway Twitty: Six Classic Albums Plus Singles (4-CD)
Article properties: Conway Twitty: Six Classic Albums Plus Singles (4-CD)
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Interpret: Conway Twitty
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Album titlle: Six Classic Albums Plus Singles (4-CD)
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Genre Rock'n'Roll
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Label Real Gone Music
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Artikelart CD
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EAN: 5036408143020
- weight in Kg 0.19
Twitty, Conway - Six Classic Albums Plus Singles (4-CD) CD 1 | ||||
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01 | It's Only Make Believe | Conway Twitty |
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02 | Hallelujah I Love Her So | Conway Twitty |
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03 | First Romance | Conway Twitty |
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04 | Make Me Know You're Mine | Conway Twitty |
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05 | Sentimental Journey | Conway Twitty |
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06 | I Vibrate (From My Head To My Feet) | Conway Twitty |
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07 | The Story Of My Love | Conway Twitty |
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08 | I'll Try | Conway Twitty |
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09 | You'll Never Walk Alone | Conway Twitty |
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10 | Don't You Know | Conway Twitty |
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11 | My One And Only You | Conway Twitty |
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12 | Mona Lisa | Conway Twitty |
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13 | Goin' Home | Conway Twitty |
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14 | Judge Of Hearts | Conway Twitty |
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15 | Hey Little Lucy (Don'tcha Put No Lipstick On) | Conway Twitty |
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16 | Heavenly | Conway Twitty |
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17 | Halfway To Heaven | Conway Twitty |
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18 | Blueberry Hill | Conway Twitty |
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19 | You Win Again | Conway Twitty |
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20 | Hey Miss Ruby | Conway Twitty |
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21 | Restless | Conway Twitty |
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22 | She's Mine | Conway Twitty |
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23 | Beach Comber | Conway Twitty |
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24 | Danny Boy | Conway Twitty |
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Twitty, Conway - Six Classic Albums Plus Singles (4-CD) CD 2 | ||||
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01 | Just Because | Conway Twitty |
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02 | Heartbreak Hotel | Conway Twitty |
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03 | Easy To Fall In Love | Conway Twitty |
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04 | My Adobe Hacienda | Conway Twitty |
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05 | A Huggin' And A Kissin' | Conway Twitty |
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06 | Can't We Go Steady | Conway Twitty |
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07 | Lonely Blue Boy | Conway Twitty |
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08 | Sorry | Conway Twitty |
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09 | Blue Moon | Conway Twitty |
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10 | Eternal Tears | Conway Twitty |
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11 | Trouble In Mind | Conway Twitty |
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12 | Pretty Eyed Baby | Conway Twitty |
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13 | Reelin' And Rockin' | Conway Twitty |
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14 | Handy Man | Conway Twitty |
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15 | Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On | Conway Twitty |
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16 | Splish Splash | Conway Twitty |
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17 | Blue Suede Shoes | Conway Twitty |
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18 | Shake, Rattle And Roll | Conway Twitty |
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19 | Diana | Conway Twitty |
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20 | Jailhouse Rock | Conway Twitty |
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21 | Treat Me Nice | Conway Twitty |
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22 | Great Balls Of Fire | Conway Twitty |
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23 | The Girl Can't Help It | Conway Twitty |
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Twitty, Conway - Six Classic Albums Plus Singles (4-CD) CD 3 | ||||
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01 | Foggy River | Conway Twitty |
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02 | Platinum High School | Conway Twitty |
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03 | A Fallen Star | Conway Twitty |
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04 | I'd Still Play The Fool | Conway Twitty |
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05 | My Heart Cries | Conway Twitty |
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06 | That's Where My Lovin' Goes | Conway Twitty |
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07 | Long Black Train | Conway Twitty |
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08 | A Tree In The Meadow | Conway Twitty |
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09 | Above And Beyond (The Call Of Love) | Conway Twitty |
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10 | (I Wanna) Live Fast, Love Hard, Die Young | Conway Twitty |
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11 | Man Alone | Conway Twitty |
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12 | I Can Hear My Heart Break | Conway Twitty |
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13 | What A Dream | Conway Twitty |
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14 | Don't You Dare Let Me Down | Conway Twitty |
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15 | The Flame | Conway Twitty |
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16 | A Million Teardrops | Conway Twitty |
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17 | The Next Kiss (Is The Last Goodbye) | Conway Twitty |
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18 | I'm In A Blue, Blue Mood (With Roy Orbison) | Conway Twitty |
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19 | Tower Of Tears | Conway Twitty |
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20 | Sweet Sorrow | Conway Twitty |
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21 | It's Driving Me Wild | Conway Twitty |
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22 | Turn Around | Conway Twitty |
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23 | Walk On By | Conway Twitty |
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24 | Portrait Of A Fool | Conway Twitty |
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Twitty, Conway - Six Classic Albums Plus Singles (4-CD) CD 4 | ||||
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01 | I Need Your Lovin' | Conway Twitty |
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02 | Born To Sing The Blues | Conway Twitty |
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03 | Shake It Up | Conway Twitty |
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04 | Maybe Baby | Conway Twitty |
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05 | Double Talk Baby | Conway Twitty |
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06 | Why Can't I Get Through To You | Conway Twitty |
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07 | When I'm Not With You | Conway Twitty |
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08 | Star Spangled Heaven | Conway Twitty |
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09 | The Hurt In My Heart | Conway Twitty |
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10 | What Am I Living For | Conway Twitty |
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11 | Is A Blue Bird Blue | Conway Twitty |
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12 | Tell Me One More Time | Conway Twitty |
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13 | What A Dream | Conway Twitty |
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14 | Teasin' | Conway Twitty |
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15 | I Need You So | Conway Twitty |
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16 | C'est Si Bon (It's So Good) | Conway Twitty |
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17 | Comfy ‘N Cozy | Conway Twitty |
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18 | A Little Piece Of My Heart | Conway Twitty |
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19 | There Is Something On Your Mind | Conway Twitty |
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20 | Unchained Melody | Conway Twitty |
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21 | The Pickup | Conway Twitty |
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22 | I Hope, I Think, I Wish | Conway Twitty |
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Conway Twitty
During Conway Twitty’s last years, he had good reason to reflect that country music was starting to take on much of the character of rock ‘n’ roll as he remembered it. New faces, impossibly young and good-looking, coming and going so quickly. It was so like rock ‘n’ roll in the Fifties. Twitty probably knew that--in all likelihood--there would never be another career like his. His story spanned almost thirty years in the country charts, and another five years in the pop charts before that. All told, there were five decades in which a Conway Twitty record was somewhere in the charts. It was an epic career with all the ingredients of the movie that will probably be made.
Conway Twitty’s greatest gift was his intuitive understanding of his audience. When rock ‘n’ roll changed in the mid-1960s, he realized that neither he nor his fans were listening to it any more, so he switched to country music. Country spoke to him and his audience in a way that rock didn’t. As a country singer, he wrote songs and searched out songs that addressed everyday highs and lows. He followed a generation as it made its often awkward way into and through adulthood. Whether rockin’ on Bandstand or croonin’ in Branson, Conway Twitty always knew what his audience wanted. He didn’t need market surveys, media consultants, or spin doctors. He just knew.
BIG RIVER
Conway Twitty was born Harold Lloyd Jenkins in Friars Point, Mississippi, on September 1, 1933, the oldest son of Floyd and Velma Jenkins. Velma named Harold for the bespectacled slapstick comedy star of the silent movies. Friars Point is a small town on the Mississippi, 75 miles south of Memphis. Five hundred people lived there then. In later years, Twitty liked to draw a parallel between himself and Huckleberry Finn, but the fact remains that Twitty was a child of the Depression. Floyd worked when and where he could, and was often away from home at WPA camps. He was part of the crew that built the dam at Sardis, Mississippi, and when Velma went there to live with him, she left young Harold with her mother. Grandma McGinnis worked at Pa Fuller’s boarding house, and it was Pa Fuller who gave Twitty his first guitar. When Twitty was eight, Floyd and Velma came back to Friars Point, and Floyd got a job on one of the ferry boats that crossed the river. Two years later, in 1943, the family moved over to the Arkansas side and settled in Helena.
Music was everywhere in that part of the Delta; it came from the Grand Ole Opry, local radio, tent shows, socials, church, street musicians, and almost every front porch. It was part of the fabric of life. “The only music we ever heard was country music,” Twitty said later. “We’d all get together on Saturday night at my grandma’s house and listen to the Grand Ole Opry. I didn’t know there was another station.” When Twitty began to pick and sing, the Opry stars were his early idols. Roy Acuff, Ernest Tubb, Red Foley, Robert Lunn 'The Talking Blues Boy,' Eddy Arnold...they all left their mark. In 1976, he recorded a tribute to the Opry, The Grandest Lady Of Them All, although sentimentality never led him to seek membership because that would have meant giving up the most lucrative night of the week in exchange for the Opry’s pittance...
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This product will be released at 3 May 2024
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