Tristen gave me this record for Valentine’s Day. It’s an interesting album. Everybody Loves A Nut is kind of a mixed bag as far as song quality goes - the album came out in 1966 when Johnny was in the depths of his pill addiction - but the cool stuff on this album is really cool, starting with the album cover by noted Mad Magazine and Time Magazine illustrator Jack Davis. Just check out those hippies. Not only that, it contains one of Cash’s best prison ballads, the darkly humorous “Joe Bean”. “Joe Bean” is about a kid about to hanged by the state of Arkansas on his 20th birthday for a murder he didn’t commit (in fact, Joe Bean had never even been to Arkansas.) The problem is Joe Bean was busy robbing a train on the day of the murder, not exactly the best alibi. Joe’s mother pleads his case to the governor of Arkansas, who refuses to pardon him but does wish him a happy birthday. Now that’s some serious country music. Tristen gave me vinyl by The Who and Merle Haggard as well, but this album was definitely the stand out of the bunch. Thanks Tristen. You know the way to a man’s heart.
Showing posts with label country music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label country music. Show all posts
Wednesday, February 17, 2021
Everybody Loves A Nut
Tristen gave me this record for Valentine’s Day. It’s an interesting album. Everybody Loves A Nut is kind of a mixed bag as far as song quality goes - the album came out in 1966 when Johnny was in the depths of his pill addiction - but the cool stuff on this album is really cool, starting with the album cover by noted Mad Magazine and Time Magazine illustrator Jack Davis. Just check out those hippies. Not only that, it contains one of Cash’s best prison ballads, the darkly humorous “Joe Bean”. “Joe Bean” is about a kid about to hanged by the state of Arkansas on his 20th birthday for a murder he didn’t commit (in fact, Joe Bean had never even been to Arkansas.) The problem is Joe Bean was busy robbing a train on the day of the murder, not exactly the best alibi. Joe’s mother pleads his case to the governor of Arkansas, who refuses to pardon him but does wish him a happy birthday. Now that’s some serious country music. Tristen gave me vinyl by The Who and Merle Haggard as well, but this album was definitely the stand out of the bunch. Thanks Tristen. You know the way to a man’s heart.
Wednesday, January 27, 2021
Tryin' Like The Devil
Sooo, you were in Randy’s Records the other day (in my best Wayne from Letterkenny voice) … killing time after a hard day at work (don’t ask.) I’d already found a two-record collection from 1974 of one of my favorite country-rock bands, The Flying Burrito Brothers (featuring the always amazing Gram Parsons, the guy who arguably invented the genre), and I was just lackadaisically thumbing through the rest of the new arrival bins, not really expecting to find anything else good. I was actually kind of bored and ready to go home when I glanced to my right at the bins I hadn’t looked through yet, and saw an album I’ve never actually seen in the wild before. At first, I thought it was just wishful thinking, but even after I blinked, the album was still there: James Talley’s 1976 album, Tryin’ Like the Devil.
“Who is James Talley?” you might legitimately ask, and it wouldn’t mean you were an idiot in my eyes because you didn’t know. James Talley is a fairly obscure country singer from Oklahoma who released two pretty amazing records in the mid-1970s. President Jimmy Carter – who, among his other virtues, has great musical taste – sang Talley’s praises and invited him to play at the White House. James Talley is a guy who should have been a star (if intelligence and talent counted for much) but instead faded into undeserved obscurity.
Tryin’ Like the Devil, James Talley's second album, is my favorite – working class outlook (despite Talley’s doctorate in American Studies), great lyrics and melody, and heartfelt singing. I discovered James Talley in the 1990s through Peter Guralnick’s book Lost Highway, a collection of essays about country and blues musicians. According to Guralnick, Talley’s cultural heroes are musicians Merle Haggard, Woody Guthrie, blues singer Otis Spann, and author James Agee, and it shows in his music. After reading the book, I managed to track down digital downloads of Talley’s albums, but had given up hope of ever finding an original vinyl copy of any of his records because they went out of print forty years ago, were never best sellers, and, to the best of my knowledge, have never been reissued. Yet there was Tryin’ Like the Devil staring me in the face at Randy’s today, moderately priced compared to how that place usually jacks up the good stuff.
So tonight, I’m listening to James Talley sing,
“I’m like that pot-bellied trucker drinkin’ coffee,
I’m like that red-headed waitress named Louise,
I’m like every workin’ man, all across the land
Just tryin’ like the devil to be free,”
and happy that the day turned out half-way decently after all.
Saturday, November 15, 2008
Hank Williams, Harry Truman, and Me
When I was a kid my parents talked a lot about the era in which they grew up. Both Vera and Joe were born in 1931. Dad graduated from Wasatch High School in Heber City, UT, in 1949 and Mom graduated in ’50. I loved the stories they told me about those years, especially the ones about the summers they spent working as a young married couple at a sawmill in the Uinta Mountains for my grandfather.
My parents’ descriptions of those times sparked an interest in that era for me that persists today. When I was younger you could say I got a little obsessive about the late 1940’s and early 1950’s. I could tell you all about the politics – Harry Truman became a hero of mine – and about the popular culture. I knew the cars, the baseball players, the clothes, the movies, and especially – of course – the music.
My burgeoning interest in all aspects of the Truman/Eisenhower era coincided with the advent of compact discs. In the early days of CD’s, record companies began remastering and reissuing music that had not been available for forty years or more. I learned to appreciate the recordings Frank Sinatra made for Capitol Records and the music Louis Armstrong recorded for Columbia and Verve in the 1950’s. Most of all I finally heard Hank Williams in all his pristine, monophonic glory. In fact, Hank’s music got me through my years as a student at Utah State University.
Of course I later learned that the fifties in America were not necessarily the magical time I had invented in my imagination. Little things like the Korean War, McCarthyism, Jim Crow, life before the polio vaccine, the demise of EC Comics caused by bluenose fanatics, and many other major and minor calamities of the decade were brought to my attention by some excellent books, such as The Fifties by David Halberstam, Truman by David McCullough, and The Glory and the Dream by William Manchester. Still, the era fascinates me and I enjoy the music and movies of the time. I can still quote scenes line for line from The Searchers and On The Waterfront, two of my favorite movies produced in the 1950’s.
All of this is my roundabout way of briefly reviewing a new set of Hank Williams CD’s that I got in the mail yesterday. The album is called Hank Williams: The Unreleased Recordings and was released a few weeks ago by Time-Life Music. The songs on the CD’s were recorded as radio programs in 1951 to hawk Mother’s Best Flour. Most of the songs were not written by Hank, although there are a few familiar favorites, such as “new” versions of “I Can’t Help It (If I’m Still In Love With You)” and “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry.” The majority of the music is made up of gospel tunes like “I’ll Fly Away,” or cover versions of songs made famous by others, such as “Blue Eyes Crying In The Rain."
Hank Williams: The Unreleased Recordings is outstanding. I have seen a few reviews that complained that the complete radio shows were not included in their entirety, but considering that the set contains fifty-four never before released songs sung by Hank Williams, that is a really petty complaint about an album this good. On a personal note, my brother Phil was a Hank Williams junkie as well, and it’s too bad it took nearly thirty years after the discovery of this music for Williams’s heirs and his record company to work out a deal to get it released. Phil would have loved this album, but because of the greediness of some of the people involved, he never got the chance to hear it. Of course, somewhere Phil is probably personal friends with Hank by now.
I have listened to Unreleased Recordings virtually every moment that I wasn’t teaching school, sleeping, or attending to husbandly or fatherly duties. The sound quality is excellent for its time, especially since the album was dubbed from acetates found in a garbage can in 1979. There are so many unfamiliar songs that listening to this album is never boring. It is very cool to hear Hank sing the words "Salt Lake City, Utah," in "California Zephyr," a song he never commercially recorded and that is only available on this album. I also especially like “Cool Water,” the old Sons of the Pioneers song that Hank turns into a mournful blues, and “The Pale Horse and His Rider,” a gospel tune based on the same scripture in Revelations that Johnny Cash quotes at the beginning of "The Man Comes Around." Hank and his band expound on the meaning of the song and the scripture in a little speech after they finish performing it.
As a Hank Williams fanatic, the existence of this album is comparable to finding a lost Hemingway manuscript that equals For Whom The Bell Tolls in quality. If you like authentic, American, un-Kenny Chesneyed Country music, you will enjoy this album.
So go buy it.
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