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Johnny Horton

Johnny Horton Album: “Country Legend”

Johnny Horton Album: “Country Legend”
Album Information :
Title: Country Legend
Release Date:2005-10-18
Type:Unknown
Genre:Country, Vintage Country, Oldies
Label:Varese
Explicit Lyrics:Yes
UPC:030206668520
Customers Rating :
Average (4.3) :(3 votes)
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Track Listing :
1 Smokey Joe's Barbecue Video
2 In My Home in Shelby County (Down Near Memphis Tennessee)
3 Coal Smoke Valve Oil and Steam
4 Plaid and Calico
5 Done Rovin' Video
6 Candy Jones Video
7 Mean Mean Son of a Gun Video
8 Shadows On The Old Bayou Video
9 Talk Gobbler Talk (Old Gobbler, The Hound Dog)
10 Go and Wash Your Dirty Feet (Before You Go to Bed)
11 Birds and Butterflies
12 Happy Millionaire
13 It's a Long Rocky Road Video
14 Words Video
15 Rhythm in My Baby's Walk Video
16 Betty Lorraine (Betty Lou)
Cary E. Mansfield (Studio City, CA USA) - October 25, 2005
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
- A Note From The Producer

The early rockabilly and honky-tonk recordings contained in this collection, mostly written by Johnny, laid the foundation for his legendary career. During this time he began performing on various Los Angeles TV shows. He also became a regular on the Louisiana Hayride (the launching pad for some of the greatest names in country music) where his popularity really began to grow.

This is the first single disc collection to document Johnny Horton's early rockabilly and honky-tonk recordings, and is a must have for any fan of this music.

hyperbolium (Earth, USA) - January 21, 2006
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
- +1/2 -- Pre-honky-tonk, pre-fame Horton sides from '51 and '52

Horton would etch his fame with hard-country classics like "Honky Tonk Man" and history-based hits that included "The Battle of New Orleans" and "North to Alaska." Before unleashing that run of sides on Columbia, he spent a few years on Mercury, and before that, he recorded these singles for the Cormac and Abbott labels in 1951 and 1952. Unlike the rockabilly-fueled style of his mid-50s work, these embryonic singles swing more lightly. There's a good helping of twang in the pedal-steel and fiddle, but with tempos that are '40s polite and vocals that are more Lefty Frizzell smooth rather than Ernest Tubb raw.

Horton wrote many of these songs of hometown joys that include family gatherings, country dances, and young romance. His first-person "Mean Mean Son of a Gun" is more of a scamp's idle boast than a delinquent's true confession, and though there are tears shed for the lost love of "It's a Long Rocky Road" Horton never plumbs the sort of desperate loneliness of fellow honky-tonkers like Hank Williams. Many of these songs would reappear in Horton's catalog over the years, but here they're backed by the sort of '40s-styled choruses that would wane in the '50s.

Laurence Zwisohn's liners place these tracks in context with a brief career history stretching from Horton's pre-recording work to his later success on Columbia. All sixteen of these sides can be found on Bear Family's 4-disc import, "The Early Years," but this for anyone but the Horton completist, this single disc is perfect. 3-1/2 stars, if allowed fractional ratings. [©2006 hyperbolium dot com]

xx - November 21, 2012
- Country Legend

My husband loves Johnny Horton, his favorite of all time a a a a a a a a a a

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