Various - Country & Western Hit Parade 1952 - Dim Lights, Thick Smoke And Hillbilly Music

Various - Country & Western Hit Parade: 1952 - Dim Lights, Thick Smoke And Hillbilly Music
The burgeoning interest in country music manifested itself in many ways. Pop A&R men scoured the hillbilly releases for songs they could cover. Twelve hundred radio stations, even in the northeast, were spinning at least two hours of country music a day, and most markets had at least one country music television show (Los Angeles led the pack with fifteen). The Grand Ole Opry concluded a deal with the Astor Hotel in New York that saw the Opry cast rotated through the hotel's prestigious ballroom. The labels and music publishers added promo men solely devoted to country music. If country music was still generally treated with condescension in the trade papers, it was earning respect for the solid sales.
By 1952, the country music industry was more-or-less centered upon Nashville. A couple of years earlier, WSM announcer David Cobb coined the phrase 'Music City USA.' "I wish I could remember the exact date, but I'm sure it was circa 1950," he recalled years later, "because we celebrated Red Foley's fortieth birthday that same year. We originated some programs for the NBC network. One of them was The Red Foley Show, and I was the announcer. One morning, I felt that my opening words would require something that placed a little more emphasis on Nashville, so it came out. 'From Music City U.S.A., Nashville, Tennessee,WSM presents The Red Foley Show.' It fell trippingly from the tongue and felt right, like a good billboard should. Right after the show I got word that [WSM manager] Jack Stapp wanted to see me in his office. When I walked in, he was beaming. 'Where did you ever get an idea like Music City U.S.A.?' He thought it was the greatest thing since George Hay had named the Grand Ole Opry." In 1951, a woman in WSM's advertising department suggested bringing all of the dee-jays around the country who spun records by Opry stars to Nashville for a celebration. Fewer than fifty came, but the event was enough of a success for it to become the annual Disc Jockey Convention, which metamorphosed into the still ongoing Country Music Week. It was a chance for the artists to thank the dee-jays and for the dee-jays to tape spots with artists that could be played on their local stations. And it cemented Nashville's position as the hub of the industry.
One country music tradition ended in 1952. On May 31, Uncle Art Satherley retired. He'd left England around 1915 and first worked in A&R in the mid-1920s. He'd joined ARC (subsequently Columbia) in 1929 and reckoned that he'd recorded 27,000 masters. Before the War, he had a personal collection of around ten thousand records that he had produced, but he'd turned them over to Columbia to be reground during the shellac shortage in 1942. "I'm the only living man who's been through this business with his hands," Satherley remarked in the 1970s. "Running the factories, making the records, finding the material, seeing the pressing's done, selling the records, and finding the artists. Always of no fixed abode, just traveling, finding country people to make these recordings." His place at Columbia was taken by his assistant, another Englishman, Don Law, who stayed at the helm until retirement in 1967. In March 1953, Spade Cooley hosted a star-studded tribute to Satherley in Hollywood that unaccountably featured mostly Capitol stars. Cooley was the only one of Satherley's acts to show up. Later that year, Satherley became a music publisher.
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Article properties:Various - Country & Western Hit Parade: 1952 - Dim Lights, Thick Smoke And Hillbilly Music
Interpret: Various - Country & Western Hit Parade
Album titlle: 1952 - Dim Lights, Thick Smoke And Hillbilly Music
Genre Country
Label Bear Family Records
- Preiscode AR
- Edition 2 Deluxe Edition
Artikelart CD
EAN: 4000127169570
- weight in Kg 0.2
| Various - Country & Western Hit Parade - 1952 - Dim Lights, Thick Smoke And Hillbilly Music CD 1 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 01 | High Noon (Do Not Forsake Me) | Ritter, Tex | ||
| 02 | Wild Side Of Life | Thompson, Hank | ||
| 03 | It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels | Wells, Kitty | ||
| 04 | Ashes Of Love | Johnnie & Jack | ||
| 05 | Easy On The Eyes | Arnold, Eddy | ||
| 06 | Give Me More, More, More (Of Your Kisses) | Frizzell, Lefty | ||
| 07 | Bumming Around | Dean, Jimmie | ||
| 08 | I Had A Dream | Swan, Jimmy | ||
| 09 | Juke Joint Johnny | Moore, Lattie | ||
| 10 | Rock The Joint | Haley, Bill | ||
| 11 | Diesel Smoke | O'Dell, Doye | ||
| 12 | Are You Teasing Me | Smith, Carl | ||
| 13 | Jambalaya (On The Bayou) | Williams, Hank | ||
| 14 | Wondering | Pierce, Webb | ||
| 15 | I Cried Again | Eanes, Jim | ||
| 16 | They Locked God Outside The Iron Curtain | Dickens, Jimmy | ||
| 17 | The Gold Rush Is Over | Snow, Hank | ||
| 18 | I'm Using My Bible For A Roadmap | Reno & Smiley | ||
| 19 | Raw Hide | Monroe, Bill | ||
| 20 | Indian Love Call | Whitman, Slim | ||
| 21 | Don't Let The Stars (Get In Your Eyes) | Willet, Slim and the Brush Cut | ||
| 22 | Almost | Morgan, George | ||
| 23 | There's A Tear In My Beer | Lister, Big Bill | ||
| 24 | Back Street Affair | Pierce, Webb | ||
| 25 | Honky Tonk Blues | Williams, Hank | ||
| 26 | Midnight | Foley, Red | ||
Dim Lights, Thick Smoke And Hillbilly Music
Country & Western Hit Parade
Diese Serie ist das Nonplus ultra, großartig aufgemacht und mit perfektem Mastering
Jack Clement, der Johnny Cash, Roy Orbison, Waylon Jennings, Don Williams und viele andere produziert hat, sagte: "Dies ist fraglos die beste Country-Serie der Musikgeschichte, kein Zweifel!"Und Robert Hilburn schrieb in der 'Los Angeles Times': "Dieses unschätzbar wertvolle Album-Projekt... ermöglicht es den Fans so zuzuhö ren, wie es schon Elvis Presley, Ray Charles und Bob Dylan taten."
Die Hits sind ergänzt um Raritäten, die die Country Music – und die Musik generell – in den Folgejahren be- einflußt haben: zum Beispiel Wanda Jacksons Originalversion von Silver Threads And Golden Needles, Carl Belews Original von Lonely Streetund Chet Atkins' wegweisendes Walk, Don't Run.
Diese Serie ist konzipiert, um neue Hörer für das Beste zu gewinnen, das die Country Music je anzubieten hatte, aber auch um alte Fans bestens zu unterhalten. Jede einzelne CD steht für eine wunderbare Zeitreise.
Neben den Hits präsentiert die Serie viele Raritäten, die die Country Music – und die Musik generell – in der Folgezeit beeinflußt haben.
Wie alles begann:
Seit vielen Jahren erhielten wir immer wieder Anfragen nach einer definitiven Country-Serie. Und nachdem unsere chronologisch sortierten R&B-/Soul-Reihen 'Blowin' The Fuse' und zuletzt 'Sweet Soul Music' (denen sich demnächst ein Projekt zur Funk Music anschließen wird) zu Riesenerfolgen wurden, haben wir entschieden: Das machen wir in vergleichbarer Form auch für die Country Music! Die ersten Folgen von 'Dim Lights, Thick Smoke And Hillbilly Music' befaßten sich mit den Jah- ren 1945 bis 1955 – jetzt setzen wir die Reise fort und bewegen uns dabei Richtung Nashville Sound.
Die Serie wurde auf Fans von heute zugeschnitten. Natürlich enthält sie die großen Hits; aber ebenso gibt es klassische Aufnah- men, die es damals nicht nach ganz oben geschafft haben und dennoch später einflußreich wurden. Jede CD glänzt mit bei- spielhaft detaillierten Erläuterungen aus erster Hand sowie mit sensationell seltenen Fotos. Und es wird aufgezeigt, wie sich die Country Music kontinuierlich weiterentwickelte, während es in anderen Bereichen des amerikanischen Musikgeschäftes deutli- che Verwerfungen gab. Jedes einzelne Booklet ist unglaubliche 72 Seiten stark! Also alles wie gewünscht: die definitive Serie!
Superlative werden zwar manchmal überstrapaziert – aber wir sind sicher: Die Serie ist Teil unserer Idee, diese Musik auch nach- gewachsenen Fans näherzubringen – und zugleich die Kenner gut zu unterhalten. Los geht es im Jahr 1956 – als die Country Music sich mit dem Rock'n'Roll arrangieren musste, der für Aufruhr sorgte....
Dim Lights, Thick Smoke And Hillbilly Music - Country & Western Hitparade
Read more at: https://www.bear-family.de/bear-family/country-serien/dim-light-thick-smoke-and-hillbillly-music/
Copyright © Bear Family Records

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