Gold [Digipak]Hank Williams
Release Date: 03/22/2005
Original Release:
2005
# of Discs:
2
J&R Item # 549364_CD
UPC # 075021034013
Label: Mercury
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Buying Info
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Disc: 1
Disc: 2
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: Hank Williams
Artist: Eddie Hill; Owen Bradley; Chet Atkins Distributor: Universal Distribution Notes: THE ULTIMATE COLLECTION includes rare tracks from the Health & Happiness radio show, pseudonymous tracks as Luke The Drifter, and 5 rarities only available on THE COMPLETE HANK WILLIAMS box set. Personnel includes: Hank Williams, Jerry Rivers, Don Helms, Sammy Pruett, Bob McNett, Cedric Rainwater, Chet Atkins, Zeke Turner, Ernie Newton, Louis Innis, Eddie Hill, Jerry Byrd, Tommy Jackson, Owen Bradley, Jack Shook. Compilation producers: Kira Florita, Andy McKaie, Mike Ragogna. Recorded between April 21, 1947 & September 23, 1952. Includes liner notes by Kita Florita. All tracks have been digitally remastered. Hank Williams: Hank Williams (vocals, guitar). While there are numerous Hank Williams compilations on the market, very few can compete with this outstanding 2002 two-disc set, sporting wonderfully remastered sound, which surveys the hard-living country legend's all-too-brief yet toweringly important recording career during the late 1940s and early '50s. In addition to including Williams hits such as the saucy "Hey, Good Lookin'" and the morbidly witty "I'll Never Get Out of This World Alive" (fittingly released around the time of his 1953 death), THE ULTIMATE COLLECTION presents revered lesser-known tunes such as the restless "Ramblin' Man" (issued under the alias "Luke the Drifter") and the beautifully melancholy "Lost Highway," all of which feature the performer's charmingly nasal drawl and spare, lilting arrangements. Although more comprehensive Williams anthologies are available, this is undoubtedly one of the best. It is difficult to complete with Mercury's 1978 two-disc Hank Williams set 40 GREATEST HITS, which set the standard for compilations to follow with its inventive sequencing and superb song selection. GOLD, however, comes mighty close. With 42 tracks spread out over two CDs, digitally remastered sound, and a thick booklet packed with notes and photographs, GOLD is an excellent primer for the Williams novice. Williams wrote so many incredible songs--so many time-tested paeans to love, loss, joy, loneliness, and heartbreak--that it is impossible to include them all under one cover. But where GOLD is missing such gems as "Nobody's Lonesome for Me" and "Baby We're Really in Love," it includes live tracks, demo rarities like "Please Don't Let Me Love You," stark anthems like "Alone and Forsaken," and two songs that Williams recorded under the name Luke the Drifter. In between are scads of Hank essentials, including "Your Cheatin' Heart," the aching "I Can't Help It (If I'm Still in Love with You)," and "I'll Never Get Out of This World Alive" (one of pop music's great existentialist anthems). If you aren't acquainted with Hank Williams--and even if you are--GOLD is a great bet.
The Robert Johnson of country, Hank Williams was a troubled visionary who hung around just long enough to change the face of American music forever. He added electric instruments and touches of Western swing and proto-rockabilly to the post-hillbilly sound of his idol Roy Acuff, writing a wealth of unforgettable tunes along the way. In the late 1940s and early '50s, Williams rose to fame with a series of these chart-topping hits, including "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry" and "Hey, Good Lookin'." Though Williams' hard living caught up with him in 1953, his legacy lives on in his timeless songs and the legions of musicians he inspired.
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Bandy, Moe Bond, Johnny Case, Neko Cash, Johnny Chesney, Kenny Copas, Cowboy Foley, Red Frizzell, Lefty Gibson, Don Gilmore, Jimmie Dale Griffin, Patty Haggard, Merle Hancock, Wayne Harmer, Sarah Hawkins, Hawkshaw Horton, Johnny Jennings, Waylon Jones, George Kristofferson, Kris Mullican, Moon Nelson, Willie Owens, Buck Parsons, Gram Paycheck, Johnny Payne, Leon Pierce, Webb Price, Ray Pride, Charley Smith, Carl Snow, Hank Sovine, Red The Maddox Brothers & Rose Tillman, Floyd Twitty, Conway Walser, Don Williams, Hank, Jr. Young, Faron
Influences:
Acuff, Roy Carter Family Delmore Brothers (The) Griffin, Rex Guthrie, Woody Hutchison, Frank Johnson, Robert Miller, Emmett (Country) Rodgers, Jimmie (Country) Rogers, Will Tubb, Ernest
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