First time this artist has been played (by track-blaster) on WMBR / * Cash is the son of Johnny Cash and 2nd wife June Carter Cash / ** - The 'String Revolution' was able to use Luther Perkin's electric guitar - a 1954 Fender Esquire, which was used on the original Cash "Folsom Prison Blues" recording.
From Charleston, South Carolina - new folk indie duo: Cary Ann Hearst, Michael Trent / * - On the LP 'Lola Versus Powerman and the Moneygoround, Part One'; Davies has said that the song is about an old school friend who died of a drug overdose.
He has been a member of Alison Krauss and Union Station since 1998. As a sideman, he has played on more than 1,600 albums, including with Ray Charles, Dolly Parton, Paul Simon, T-Bone Burnett, Keb' Mo', Ricky Skaggs, J. D. Crowe & the New South, Elvis Costello, James Taylor and Johnny Mathis.
* Then a hit for Buddy Holly, April 1958 - #154 on the "Rolling Stone 500 Greatest Songs" list / **- This was a reissue of his 1970 album 'Don't Think Twice' {tittled 'The Country Side Of Waylon Jennings' in England}, with the two tracks from this single added. // Click the Link above, left to view the original single.
* - On his second solo album ''Hot Rats" (Bizarre). The original was used as instrumental background music, on a BBC London radio program by Danny Baker, also on other BBC radio shows.
The lead guitar solo was played by McGuinn on David Crosby's 'Gretsch Country Gentleman' guitar. / Click on the Link above, left to view the original single, with a color picture sleeve.
* - On his second solo album ''Hot Rats" (Bizarre). The original was used as instrumental background music, on a BBC London radio program by Danny Baker, also on other BBC radio shows.
Jesse McReynolds died June 23rd, 2023 at age 92. He played mandolin many years with his brother Jim McReynolds, first as "The McReynolds Brothers {1947 - 1952}, then as "Jim & Jesse" (1952 - 2002}. / Click on Link above/ left, to view the original album.
Originally formed 10 years ago, as the nightly "house band" at the Ole Smoky Distillery bottle shop in Gatlinburg, TN / Click the Link above, left to read an article about this release.
Time:
5:47
Artist:
Roy Acuff [Billed as ' Roy Acuff And His Crazy Tennesseeans']
* - On his second solo album ''Hot Rats" (Bizarre). The original was used as instrumental background music, on a BBC London radio program by Danny Baker, also on other BBC radio shows.
It was also scheduled to be the B-side of a Sept 1965 single, a cover of Dylan's 'The Times They Are A-Changin'. It was never issued, but a picture sleeve was printed - click the Link above, left, to view it. According to Sundazed Records, which issued a 45 of this pairing in 2011, only four copies of this sleeve are known to exist.
Click on the Link above, to view the original single and its pressing variations. Originally the song was called "Don't Be Long" and recorded by a variation of the Byrds named on the recording as "The Beefeaters" {Oct 1964, Elektra). This was reissued in June 1965 on a short-lived Elektra subsidiary called "Bounty", after the mega-success of 'Mr Tambourine Man'. / Click on the Link above, to see the original single
Nicknamed The "Killer" and "The Ferriday Flash", Lewis died Friday/ Oct 29th, 2022, at age 87. One of the very greatest of the 1st generation of Rock N' Rollers, in 1986 he was one of the first 10 inductees into the Rock N' Roll Hall Of Fame, and the last surviving member (YEAH - I know - who'd a thunk?!?) // The album was included in Mojo Magazine's "The 67 Lost Albums You Must Own!" - "An unbelievably seismic document of rock 'n' roll so demonic and primal it can barely keep its stage suit on.... It's up there with James Brown's great live albums." / * Williams recorded the song on his last session at Castle Studio in Nashville, TN on September 23 1952.
* - On his second solo album ''Hot Rats" (Bizarre). The original was used as instrumental background music, on a BBC London radio program by Danny Baker, also on other BBC radio shows.
Time:
6:22
Artist:
Moby Grape [Jerry Miller, Don Stevenson, Skip Spence]
* - But first recorded by 'Eddie Dean with The Frontiersmen', 1954; Ritter's version was spelled 'I Dreamed Of A Hill-Billy Heaven' / He was known as Bob Dunlap until 1987, when he replaced Bob Stinson as lead guitarist in The Replacements and adopted the "Slim" monicker. Before that, he was best known as a frequent collaborator with Minneapolis rocker Curt Almsted (aka "Curtiss A") and was in a number of Curtiss A's bands.
* - On his second solo album ''Hot Rats" (Bizarre). The original was used as instrumental background music, on a BBC London radio program by Danny Baker, also on other BBC radio shows.