You know, Country & Western!
This ain't your Dad's country music. It's your Granddad's! None of that new Nashville bullshit either. This is where you'll find what I consider the best in Country (Classic and Alt), Folk, and Americana.
Catching Elephant is a theme by Andy Taylor
(Source: whiskeybentandhellboundd)
Tennessee Ernie Ford, Hank Thompson & Wanda Jackson were the heavy hitters at Capitol, which was a West Coast label, and why you’re not seeing others like Johnny Cash, George Jones, Marty Robbins or Buck Owens. Though if you were a pop singer, Capitol was the place to be, but by this point Sinatra had already left to start his own label with Sam, Dean and others.
1963-(via File Photo) by File Photo on Flickr.
Just a reminder that in 1963, Jackie Gleason was every bit as popular as Sinatra or Nat King Cole. Truth.
Look, December 1963
A brand new show on the air from 4:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. ET (real soon!) only on BBOX Radio.
Lots of new music on the show today + some classic gems, a set on Fools, an Eddy Arnold tribute and as much as I can squeeze in a two hour slot.
Other Hoe Down features: Microprocessor circuitry.
I played a bunch of suggestions from last week’s answers on my radio show. What’s burnin’ a hole in yer ears when it comes to country/americana/folk/rockabilly?
❞Charline’s dynamic stage performances during this time were groundbreaking and controversial. She moved to Dallas to headline the Big D Jamboree, an unusual honor for a woman at the time. She was the first female country singer to perform onstage wearing pants, and was the only one photographed with a cigarette. While other female country performers stood demurely to sing, Charline pranced across stage, climbed on top of amplifiers, or sang lying down. Her shows were rowdy and sometimes racy. “I was shakin’ that thing on stage,” she said, “long before Elvis even thought about it.” Her reputation as a hard-drinking, cigarette-smoking performer with a hot temper contrasted with that of gingham-dress-clad Kitty Wells. She also performed for the Louisiana Hayride, Red Foley’s Ozark Jubilee, and the Grand Ole Opry (which censored her music). She toured with artists such as Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Roy Orbison, and Jerry Lee Lewis. In 1955 she was named runner-up (to Wells) as the year’s best female singer in Country and Western Jamboree magazine’s DJ’s Choice poll. Presley paid her tribute as “one of the finest entertainers on stage I’ve ever seen.”
With the announcement of Google’s new streaming service, I gotta ask…what do you use to listen to music? Just iTunes? Are you loyal to one? Do you pay? Pay for more than one?
Americana Award Nominees were announced today.
The ceremony’s not until September so these albums will hardly seem fresh by that point*, but a good crop nevertheless. Good year to be a duo.
ALBUM OF THE YEAR
Buddy & Jim, Buddy Miller & Jim Lauderdale
Cheaters Game, Kelly Willis & Bruce Robison
From The Ground Up, John Fullbright
O Be Joyful, Shovels and Rope
Old Yellow Moon, Emmylou Harris & Rodney Crowell
ARTIST OF THE YEAR
Buddy Miller
Dwight Yoakam
Emmylou Harris
Richard Thompson
EMERGING ARTIST OF THE YEAR
JD McPherson
John Fullbright
Milk Carton Kids
Shovels and Rope
SONG OF THE YEAR
Birmingham – Shovels & Rope
Good Things Happen to Bad People – Richard Thompson
Ho Hey – The Lumineers
North Side Gal – JD McPherson
DUO/GROUP OF THE YEAR
Bruce Robison and Kelly Willis
Buddy Miller and Jim Lauderdale
Emmylou Harris and Rodney Crowell
Shovels & Rope
INSTRUMENTALIST OF THE YEAR
Doug Lancio
Greg Leisz
Jay Bellerose
Larry Campbell
Mike Bub
*Seems the whole shebang could use more tightening. Maybe a ceremony twice a year with 4-week voting time and the awards a couple weeks later. I mean, O Be Joyful came out in July 2012. That’s ancient history in these times. And to call them emerging is kinda offbase. Emerging to whom, I would ask.
(Source: stealcollective)
The way Texans speak, from using words like “y’all” to that old Texas twang, is iconic in American culture. But linguists say the twang is fading â and that, in a few decades, “talking Texan” may sound quite different than it does today.
Don’t let that twang die! Say cee-ment and UM-brella. Accents are part of our national charm. See also.
Devin Cuddy - East Coast Bred
Thanks to iranosaurus for the heads up.
Mandatory Monday Morning Merle
(Source: twitter.com)
Go Cat Go - Please Mama Please
Hope you called whoever you call mama. Here’s another Mom song, which happens to be one of the finest contemporary* rockabilly tracks you’ll ever hear. Read the story of Go Cat Go here.
*It’s already “vintage” since it was recorded in ‘92.