New Delevantes and New Sarah Shook and of course lots of old stuff Additional discographical, biographical information was added by Lawrence Azrin. Also, check out the links at your leisure.
Time
Performer [Composer]
Song
Album [Format]
Misc
Misc –
REQ:Request
BED:Music Played Whilst Talking
NEW:New Release
( ):Label, Year Rec/Rel
Time:
4:00
Artist:
Hank Williams [Billed as 'Hank Williams And His Guitar']
... Taken from performances on the Shreveport radio station KWKH between August 1948 and May 1949, with only Williams' vocals and acoustic guitar. / Click on the Link above, left, to view the original single.
Recorded December 21, 1950, Castle Studio at The Tulane Hotel, 206 8th Ave. North, Nashville, TN // Later in 1951, it was recorded by Tony Bennett, with a light orchestral arrangement from Percy Faith. Williams later telephoned Bennett to say, "Tony, why did you ruin my song?" But that was a prank – in fact, Williams liked Bennett's version, and played it on jukeboxes whenever he could. // Click on the Link above, left, to view the original shellac record
Waters's only all-acoustic album. / PERSONNEL: Muddy Waters - acoustic guitar / Willie Dixon - string bass, Clifton James - drums / Buddy Guy - acoustic guitar. It is Waters's only all-acoustic album. // Click on the Link above, left, to view the album
British-American bluegrass band from London, co-led by Kentuckian Sid Griffin {was in the Long Ryders in the 1980s; also wrote books on Gram Parsons and bluegrass music} and Scotsman Neil Robert Herd. Griffin formed the group in Los Angeles in 1989 and then reorganized the band after moving to London.
... A compilation to accompany the book "Listen Whitey! The Sights And Sounds Of Black Power 1965-1975" by Pat Thomas. While befriending members of the Black Panther Party, Thomas discovered rare recordings of speeches, interviews, and music by noted activists Huey Newton, Bobby Seale, Eldridge Cleaver and many others. // * - Full title: 'Listen, Whitey! The Sounds Of Black Power 1967-1974' /// Click on the Link above, left, to view the original single
Also released as the B-side of 'Tumbling Dice', April 1978. / * - At the time, "Simple Dreams" was the second best-selling album ever by a female artist (behind only Carole King's "Tapestry")
... Born as "Everett Ismael" in 1908, in Sallislaw, Oklahoma; then settled in the 1930s in California following Okies’ exodus there. // Click on the Link above, left, to view the original shellac record