|
George Jones Album: “My Very Special Guests: Legacy Edition [Remaster]”
![George Jones Album: “My Very Special Guests: Legacy Edition [Remaster]” George Jones Album: “My Very Special Guests: Legacy Edition [Remaster]”](http://www.bestcountrysingers.com/covers_prG/george-jones/2005_170_170_My%2520Very%2520Special%2520Guests%253A%2520Legacy%2520Edition%2520%255BRemaster%255D.jpg) Description :
Personnel: George Jones (vocals); Emmylou Harris, Elvis Costello (vocals, guitar); Ricky Skaggs (vocals, fiddle); Chet Atkins, Dickey Betts, Don Potter, Ernie Thacker, Freddy Powers, Glenn Keener, Jack Clement, Jack W. Routh, Jerry Hensley, Johnny Cash, Ken Bell, Larry Byrom, Mac McAnally, Mark Casstevens, Mark Goldenberg, Pat Flynn, Pete Wade, Phil Baugh, Reggie Young, Richard Bennett, Rodney Crowell, Terry Crisp, Tommy Allsup, Vince Gill, Biff Watson, Billy Sanford, Junior Blankenship, Jimmy English, Danny Parks, Steve Gibson, Albert Lee, Cliff Parker, Dale Siegfried, Bobby Thompson, Boomer Castleman, Brent Mason, Brian Ahern, Charlie McCoy (guitar); Dan Dugmore, Doyle Grisham, Hank DeVito, Jim Vest, Pete Drake, Tommy Spurlock, Weldon Myrick, Sonny Garrish, John Hughey, Bobby Turner, Buddy Emmons (steel guitar); Jerry Douglas (dobro); Marty Stewart (mandolin); Curly Ray Cline, Johnny Gimble, Mark O'Connor , Rob Hajacos, Art Stamper, Stuart Duncan, Jimmy Belkin, Buddy Spicher (fiddle); Terry McMillan, Mickey Raphael (harmonica); Andrew Love (tenor saxophone); Wayne Jackson (trumpet); The Memphis Horns (horns); David Briggs, Dennis Burnside, Earl Ball, Glen D. Hardin, Hargus "Pig" Robbins, John Hobbs, Larry Butler, Leon Russell, Shane Keister, Barry Beckett (piano); Benmont Tench, Butch Lee (Hammond b-3 organ); Mike Lawler, Robert Ogden, Steve Nathan, Bobby Emmons, Bobby Wood, Chalmers Davis (keyboards); Emory Gordy Jr., Henry Strzelecki, Jack Cooke, Jack Williams, Mike Chapman, Tommy Cogbill, Willie Weeks, Bob Wray, Dave Hungate, Glenn Wolf, Marshall Grant, Ralph Ezell (bass guitar); Harry Stinson, Kenny Aronoff, Lonnie Wilson, Eddie Bayers, John Ware, Kenny Malone, Paul Leim, Owen Hale, Jerry Carrigan, Jim Isbell, Karl Himmel, W. S. "Fluke" Holland (drums); Lynn Peterzell, Paulinho Da Costa, Ron "Snake" Reynolds, Mark Morris (percussion); Jonell Mosser, Lisa Silver, Arnold McCuller, Sir Harry Bowens, Sweet Pea Atkinson, The Jordanaires, The Nashville Edition, The Cherry Sisters, Karen Taylor, Millie Kirkham, Dennis Wilson , Diana Vanette, Sherri Huffman, Hershel Wiginton, Lea Jane Berinati (background vocals).
<p>Recording information: 1977 - 1994.
<p>In 1977, the Possum, George Jones, one of the greatest pure country singers of all time, helped start a trend that continues to this day: The Duets Album. He got together with friends and fans, picked some songs-- new ones, standards--got a sharp backup band, and let it happen. Peers Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings are here, as are onetime wife Tammy Wynette, pop star Linda Rondstadt, and the then up and coming "new wave" angry young man Elvis Costello. The latter was actually very natural: Costello is a longtime Jones fan and brings to the session his original song, "Stranger In The House," a quintessential honky-tonk tune.
<p>This set isn't the usually mournful, soulful fare that Jones does so well--it's a "party" album for the most part. Yet at this party everyone performs with earnestness, good humor and respect, to both their host and the songs sung. Highlights are "Stranger..." and the duet with Emmylou Harris, "Here We Are."
Track Listing :
1 |
Night Life (With Waylon Jennings) |
|
2 |
Bartender's Blues - With James Taylor |
|
3 |
Here We Are - (with Emmylou Harris) |
|
4 |
I've Turned You to Stone - (with Linda Ronstadt) |
|
5 |
It Sure Was Good - (with Tammy Wynette) |
|
6 |
I Gotta Get Drunk (With Willie Nelson) |
|
7 |
Proud Mary - (with Johnny Paycheck) |
|
8 |
Stranger in the House - (with Elvis Costello) |
|
9 |
I Still Hold Her Body (But I Think I've Lost Her Mind) - (with Dennis & Ray Of Dr. Hook) |
|
10 |
Will the Circle Be Unbroken - (with Pops & Mavis Staples) |
|
11 |
Few Ole Country Boys, A - (with Randy Travis) |
|
12 |
It Hurts as Much in Texas (As It Did in Tennessee) - (with Ricky Van Shelton) |
|
13 |
You Never Looked That Good When You Were Mine - (with Patti Page) |
|
14 |
All I Want to Do in Life - (with Janie Fricke) |
|
15 |
Wonderful World Outside - (with Ralph Stanley) |
|
16 |
You Can't Do Wrong and Get By - (with Ricky Skaggs) |
|
17 |
You Don't Seem to Miss Me - (with Patty Loveless) |
|
18 |
Patches - (with B.B. King) |
|
2-1 |
Good Year For the Roses, A - (with Alan Jackson) |
|
2-2 |
Yesterday's Wine - With Merle Haggard |
|
2-3 |
Our Love Was Ahead of Its Time - (with Deborah Allen) |
|
2-4 |
We Sure Make Good Love - (with Loretta Lynn) |
|
2-5 |
Size Seven Round (Made of Gold) - (with Lacy J. Dalton) |
|
2-6 |
I Got Stripes - (with Johnny Cash) |
|
2-7 |
Fiddle and Guitar Band - (with Charlie Daniels) |
|
2-8 |
We Didn't See a Thing - (with Ray Charles/Chet Atkins) |
|
2-9 |
Love Bug, The - (with Vince Gill) |
|
2-10 |
Love's Gonna Live Here - (with Buck Owens) |
|
2-11 |
If I Could Bottle This Up - With Shelby Lynne |
|
2-12 |
If You Can Touch Her At All - (with Lynn Anderson) |
|
2-13 |
All That We've Got Left - (with Vern Gosdin) |
|
2-14 |
This Bottle (In My Hand) - (with David Allan Coe) |
|
2-15 |
Talking to Hank - (with Mark Chesnutt) |
|
2-16 |
Never Bit a Bullet Like This - (with Sammy Kershaw) |
|
2-17 |
Race Is On, The - (with Travis Tritt) |
|
2-18 |
I've Been There - (with Tim Mensy) |
|
2-19 |
Traveller's Prayer - (with Sweethearts of the Rodeo) |
|
|
Album Information :
Title: |
My Very Special Guests: Legacy Edition [Remaster] |
|
|
UPC:828767762425
|
Format:CD
|
Type:Performer
|
Genre:Country - Nashville Sound
|
Artist:George Jones
|
Guest Artists:Waylon Jennings; James Taylor; Emmylou Harris; Linda Ronstadt; Tammy Wynette; Willie Nelson; Elvis Costello; Pops Staples
|
Producer:Kyle Lehning; Brian Ahern; Charles
|
Label:Legacy Recordings
|
Distributed:Sony Music Distribution (
|
Release Date:2005/11/28
|
Original Release Year:1977
|
Discs:2
|
Recording:Analog
|
Mixing:Analog
|
Mastering:Digital
|
Mono / Stereo:Stereo
|
Studio / Live:Studio
|
|
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
- The Possum Can Sing Well With Anyone!
George Jones vocal versatility and extensive range makes him an ideal duet partner for just about anyone as My Very Special Guests - a reissue of Jones' 1979 ten-song duets album of the same name bolstered mightily by 27 additional tracks from other sources - makes quite clear. The tracks from the original album, which run from Jones' soulful pairing with Waylon Jennings on "Night Life" to the traditional stroll "Stranger In The House" alongside the smoothly understated Elvis Costello, leads off this two-disc set, followed by the bonus tracks (including eight from 1991's Friends in High Places). The bonus highlight probably being the impressive collaboration with Ray Charles and Chet Atkins on "We Didn't See a Thing."
Jones sounds as comfortable flanking the poppish Deborah Allen on "Our Love Was Ahead Of Its Time" in 1984 as he does swapping angst with modern trad queen Patty Loveless in 1997 on their CMA award-winning "You Don't Seem To Miss Me," and his tone is equally distinctive next to Charlie Daniels' hearty bark when tackling " Fiddle And Guitar Band" as it is when paired with Alan Jackson's soft baritone on "A Good Year For The Roses." It is Jones' displays of singular strength and flexibility that tie this eclectic collection together, and make it as indispensable as his best solo recordings.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
- This George is for you!
This is a great CD for all George Jones fans but also county and fans of other types of music. Two CD is packed with 37 duets with the likes of, Johnny Cash, Ray Charles, B.B. King, James Taylor and Alan Jackson. This includes all 10 songs from his 1979 duet album plus 27 more recorded in the 80's and 90's.
Customer review - December 16, 2004
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
- It's Not Love But It's Not Bad...
Yes indeed, as Merle Haggard once sang, "It's not love but it's not bad," and MY VERY SPECIAL GUESTS probably remains one of the most curious albums George Jones ever made for CBS Records. In his bio on George, Bob Allen wrote that this album featured George at his "brochitis and emphysema-ridden worst," and there is no denying that George was going through a dark period of alchohol and cocaine addiction. Released in 1978, George's record label had opted for pairing George up with many fellow country legends (Willie Nelson, Tammy Wynette, Waylon Jennings) and many of the top pop stars of the day (Linda Ronstadt, James Taylor, Elvis Costello). They threw in Pop and Mavis Staples for good measure. The results? Not as bad as many would lead you to believe.
The highlights are, as you might expect, the more "stone-country" selections. Jones and Willie Nelson fit together like a hand in a glove on "I Gotta Get Drunk" and his duet with Emmylou Harris on "Here We Are" showcases two vocal geniuses at work. The song with Ronstadt, "I've Turned You To Stone," is also endearing, and it appears that Ronstadt (who had deep roots in country music anyway) knew what not to do in recording with the Possum. The most memorable song on the record is, of course, "Bartender's Blues" with James Taylor, which Jones often performs to this day in concert. Written specifically for Jones by Taylor, their harmonies are quite magnificent (Most of the vocals on this album were overdubs, since George was pretty much drunk and MIA for most of 1977). The duet with Tammy, "It Sure Was Good," is a catchy but flimsy tune about love gone wrong, echoing their own personal relationship in the early seventies.
As to the more "experimental" aspects of the disc, there are some let-downs but also pleasant surprises. Jones duet with Johnny Paycheck on John Fogerty's "Proud Mary" is atrociously unnecessary, culled from the sessions for their duet album DOUBLE TROUBLE. Although the song is well executed, producer Billy Sherrill might have been better off going in a more traditional direction with the boys rather than exploring the late-sixties "swamp rock" sound. Similarly, George's duet with Waylon Jennings on the album's opener "Night Life" has promise but never seems to take off, although it's awesome to hear Waylon's asides during the tune ("Here comes the Possum!")
Oddly enough, the biggest surprises come from the rock stars who appear on the album. Dennis and Ray from the band Dr. Hook back up George on "I Still Hold Her Body (But I Think I've Lost Her Mind)" and the tune is solid country with Jones delivering a soulful perfomance (Check out the way he sings the last line of the song - killer!). Likewise, "Stranger In The House," with Elvis Costello, has an elusive magic to it that you would never expect from teaming up the king of new wave with the king of country soul. Costello, who wrote the song for the album and would later record "A Good Year For The Roses" and the Jones-written "The Color Of The Blues" brings the same sort of charm that Keith Richards would bring to "Say It's Not You" on THE BRADLEY BARN SESSIONS in the 1990s.
The album closes with "Will The Circle Be Unbroken" with the Staples. Despite the shortcomings of the album, it's great to hear two soulful singers like Pop Staples and George Jones singing together on the same track. MY VERY SPECIAL GUESTS may not be the best album George Jones ever made, but it's certainly not as bad as you might think. In fact, the good outweighs the bad, and for any true George Jones fan there are too many good songs here to ignore.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
- Jones on Skid Row
Three years in the making and not exactly a robust sounding Jones, it still has it's moments. For completists only.
|