Showing posts with label gatlin brothers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gatlin brothers. Show all posts
Saturday, September 7, 2019
September Is Country Music Month (The Middlin' Seventies)
Country music in the seventies was such a schizophrenic time, it's almost impossible to sum up the decade in one post. Whereas in pop music, the sixties could be separated by a solid line right through the middle of the decade, the seventies in country music are more like thirds, or even fourths.
In 1970 Merle Haggard was still at his peak, with The Fightin' Side of Me; Conway Twitty had re-recorded and had a monstrous hit with Hello Darlin'; Ray Price had For The Good Times.
'71 saw Easy Loving by Freddie Hart; Sammi Smith's recording of Kristofferson's Help Me Make It Through The Night was huge. Conway and Loretta teamed up and recorded After The Fire Is Gone.
By 1972 record labels began flexing their muscle, and radio suffered the consequences. Even Merle and Faron Young became a bit poppier, with Carolyn and It's Four In The Morning, respectively. And the cringe-worthy Happiest Girl In The Whole USA shot to number one.
'73 still had some gems, like Charlie Rich's Behind Closed Doors, but it also produced dogs like Teddy Bear Song.
By 1974 we saw the likes of Olivia Newton-John and John Denver, pop singers, take over the charts. Even many of country's stalwarts buckled to record company demands and recorded covers of pop hits ~ it wasn't a good look. On the list of the top 100 singles of 1974 it's almost impossible to find a true country track. One of the only bright spots of that year was the emergence of a new guy named Ronnie Milsap.
And 1974 is kind of where I stopped.
I didn't stop completely, but I began to wean myself. The preset button on my car radio no longer landed on the country station. The emotion I most distinctly recall is disgust. I truly believed country music was gone forever, and it wasn't right. I'd given almost a decade of my musical existence over to country; had grown to cherish it, and it went and knifed me. Most of the country music I was even familiar with by now was the pond scum featured on network variety shows ~ Convoy by CW McCall and Rhinestone Cowboy by Glen Campbell.
One could find some real country if they searched long and hard enough. Gary Stewart and a new girl singer, Emmylou Harris, were recording real country. Merle even dipped a toe back in the country music brook. Then there was Gene Watson. I didn't miss out on these artists, because I became an album connoisseur and took a stab in the dark and plunked down three dollars and ninety-nine cents at Woolworth's solely on faith. Emmylou was giving corporate country a dainty middle finger and recording true country in the face of the pop-country pap radio was forced to play. Gene Watson was who he was, which was stone country, and take him or leave him, he reckoned. Gary Stewart was the hillbilly renaissance of Jerry Lee Lewis.
Around this time, Wanted: The Outlaws became a thing. Truth be told, The Outlaws was a compilation LP put together solely by a producer in Nashville. This was no concept album by any stretch. But it took over, much like the Urban Cowboy soundtrack hijacked the airwaves. I'd loved Waylon Jennings since 1967, so there was no "discovery". The Outlaws was a new Waylon, and I was okay with it; but it wasn't the "best country album of all time", regardless of what fable Rolling Stone Magazine tries to foist upon us.
And this is where my consumer story comes in. I grew weary of kneeling on the living room carpet to spin Gary and Emmylou on my mom and dad's castoff console stereo. The built-in fabric-covered speakers had one setting, and poor as I was, I was ready to step into the new audio world. One Saturday I scuttled off to a little sound shop ensconced inside a crumbling strip mall and innocently placed myself in the greasy salesman's hands. "This new Swedish company, Bang and Olufsen, has these speakers that are bad!" They were definitely ponderous, as was the price tag. Inside that little shop, everything sounded exactly the same, but boy, these B&O's were big! Oh well, I had my BankAmericard inside my crocheted shoulder bag. What the heck? Throw in that Technics turntable and the Pioneer receiver!
Merle's "Movin' On" LP did sound better on my new setup. Though there were few current albums worth purchasing, I made the most of what I already owned. As 1976 dawned, I discovered a couple of new artists who were different, and thus good. Eddie Rabbitt was one of those. Larry Gatlin and the Gatlin Brothers were the other.
'77 produced a hit that struck me, "Stranger" by Johnny Duncan with a nameless female singing strong backup (who we eventually would learn was named Janie Fricke). A group previously ensconced in gospel suddenly began releasing country singles. They went by the old-fashioned moniker of "Oak Ridge Boys". On the minus side, Dave and Sugar, a thoroughly stupid name, became huge, and yep, I fell for it, too. I bought their albums, even though it was impossible to keep up with their changing personnel.
1978 was mostly forgettable, except for the rise of another artist who would take country even further from its roots. Thanks, Kenny Rogers. And, of course, Barbara Mandrell scorched everyone's eardrums with "Sleepin' Single In A Double Bed". There was, though, John Conlee's "Rose Colored Glasses".
Nothing much changed in 1979. The cast of players didn't change. The only memorable hit was by a folk-pop group called "The Dirt Band". Gosh, whatever happened to those guys?
If a year produces at the most two great songs, I'd label that a failure, which is essentially my take on the seventies. I think my fondest memories of the seventies were albums by Julio Iglesias (seriously) and Marty Robbins (very seriously). Is it any wonder I threw my hands in the air and surrendered?
However, let's not just let the decade go without reviewing the best.
1970:
1971:
1972:
1973:
Bonus Track:
1974:
1975:
Bonus Track:
1976:
1977:
Bonus Track:
Bonus Track #2 (Rodney Crowell!):
Bonus Track #3:
1978:
1979 (written by Rodney Crowell):
Gotta use this one, because the song is not the same without Linda Ronstadt:
If one is an easy grader, the seventies weren't all that bad. If one has scruples, yea, the seventies were bad. But at least they brought us Gene Watson and Eddie Rabbitt and the Oaks.
I'll settle for that.
Saturday, May 5, 2018
Record Albums
The memory is a wonderful thing. We all remember the awesome albums, the "Help!" and the "Easy Come Easy Go".
We overlook the fact that we spent countless dollars throughout our lives on albums that were essentially worthless.When I was around thirteen and finally had $4.99 to purchase a record album now and then, my modus operandi was hampered by the fact that one of the only stores that was traversible by city bus was JC Penney. Penney's basement not only housed their booming catalog department but also bins of record albums. Unfortunately, the store management didn't want to take space away from the fiberglass drapery displays and shiny aluminum percolators, so the record racks were skinny. We had Loretta Lynn and George Jones, Melba Montgomery and, of course, Johnny Cash. If Alice and I showed up at just the opportune moment, we might snag a Merle Haggard. I had the damnedest time locating Waylon Jennings' RCA debut. So I bought a lot of stuff I didn't even want because I just wanted to buy something. If someone were to look at my record collection, they'd think, wow, she must be a big fan of this "Carl and Pearl Butler". No. This was what the store had.
I eventually amassed a decent collection of albums by artists I actually liked -- Merle, of course, Lynn Anderson, Faron Young. However, the records released by some artists I truly admired were awful. Tammy Wynette would stick two hits on an album, the first track on Side A and B, and fill the remainder with dreck; cover songs or vanity songs written by a distant relative or friend of the producer. Country albums weren't viewed so much as "artistic" as they were regarded as "$$". Rock fans wanted albums; country fans wanted the hits. It took Merle to change all that.
In the seventies, I bought Barbara Mandrell albums and a lot of Statler Brothers, some Gatlin Brothers; one by a new group called the Oak Ridge Boys; some gems like Gene Watson and a brand new girl named Emmylou. I was in love with Eddie Rabbitt. Albums got better, but I mostly dropped the phonograph needle on the hits, with a couple of deep tracks thrown in. Barbara Mandrell's albums, for instance, could be counted on to feature crisp clear renditions of her latest hits and a bunch of forgettable stuffing. There were artists who never quite garnered a lasting career, but should have, like LaWanda Lindsey. I also remember purchasing a disc by someone called La Costa. It turned out she was Tanya Tucker's sister. I was enamored of her album for a while. She had a track called "Best of My Love" that I really liked. The credits beneath the title read, Frey and Henley. No clue.
By the eighties, I knew what I wanted and what I wanted to buy. By then, at least, I had Musicland, which was one quick zip away from my house to the local mall. My sister sent me a gift certificate for a CD. I didn't own a CD player. So I bought one. The very first CD (free, thanks to my sister) I bought was "Keys To The Highway" by Rodney Crowell. I took it home, scraped off the shrink-wrap with my fingernail, pried open the hard plastic clasp with a kitchen knife, inserted the flat circle into my new player and stood back and let the crisp music caress my ears. The CD wasn't even that good, but that sound!
Thus began my collecting phase. I determined to buy every single George Strait CD and I did. But as much as I love George, every album wasn't a gem. Every once in a while George released one that made my heart soar, but frankly, I granted George a whole lot of leeway. Dwight was more dependable. Dwight was my "other collectable". The eighties for me can be summed up by the names George and Dwight.
By the nineties I had Mark Chesnutt and Diamond Rio and Restless Heart. One cannot go wrong buying an album by Mark Chesnutt.
And then I stopped.
I now have lots of digital albums that will dissolve like ether once my current computer dies. Now people buy "songs", which isn't a bad bet. Albums, aside from the Beatles and Merle, are money suckers.
My work is done.
Thursday, August 24, 2017
Buying Country Albums Was An Exercise In Futility
...yet I bought them.
Most people probably can't relate to my particular musical circumstances. I was one of the diehard country fans in the nineteen seventies who was not enamored with Johnny Cash. That left me options that were paltry. Johnny Cash was a persona. He wasn't a country artist; he was a folk singer. His three-chord ditties could be done by anyone -- heck, even I did them and I was a putrid guitar player. His songs were boom-chicka, boom-chicka, boom-chicka, boom-chicka. That's it. If it wasn't for the man that Cash was, he probably wouldn't have even gotten a recording contract. Country music, to me, was twin fiddles, steel guitar, and a voice that cried. I was a purist in a sea of muddy productions that yearned to be "relevant", which wasn't the allure of country music at all.
Looking back, John Denver was probably more country than the so-called country artists of the era. The Eagles were more country than the country hit-makers. No wonder Olivia Newton-John won Female Vocalist of the Year at the 1974 CMA's.
I liked Connie Smith, Faron Young, Merle, Johnny Rodriguez, and Gene Watson. In my early twenties, I was a fossil.
The new gal, Barbara Mandrell, had potential. There's no denying she was cute. She was tiny with huge hair. She could actually play an instrument. She liked real country, until she didn't. By the time she was sleeping single in a double bed, I was over her. Before that, though, she did songs that were "updated" country -- still country, but bowing to the hipness of the nineteen seventies. I wanted to be hip, too, so I decided Barbara would be my new go-to girl.
She did songs like this:
And this:
Country albums were a retail lie. Stick the number one single on it and the rubes will buy it. Three dollars and ninety-nine cents in the bank!
You can't count "Wanted: The Outlaws". That was a slapped-together conglomeration of outtakes, the brainchild of a prescient record producer.
Certainly there were some other stellar albums released during the decade.
...but sadly, very few.
If one was to purchase albums, to, I guess, have on their shelf (singles were so much more prudent -- no waste -- and by the seventies, marked down to eighty-nine cents), here are some of the better bets:
Folks who don't know think the seventies were Kenny Rogers and Willie and Dolly. In fact, those artists were "almost eighties". There was a long-spanning decade between Tammy Wynette and Janie Fricke. One had to root out the Crystals and the Sylvias from the Gene Watsons. And trust me, there was a world of difference. If only for Gene Watson, the seventies were worth the pain.
Music is music is music. The vast majority of it is bad. We need to remember the jewels.
I still don't know what I'll ever do with my Barbara Mandrell albums, though.
Most people probably can't relate to my particular musical circumstances. I was one of the diehard country fans in the nineteen seventies who was not enamored with Johnny Cash. That left me options that were paltry. Johnny Cash was a persona. He wasn't a country artist; he was a folk singer. His three-chord ditties could be done by anyone -- heck, even I did them and I was a putrid guitar player. His songs were boom-chicka, boom-chicka, boom-chicka, boom-chicka. That's it. If it wasn't for the man that Cash was, he probably wouldn't have even gotten a recording contract. Country music, to me, was twin fiddles, steel guitar, and a voice that cried. I was a purist in a sea of muddy productions that yearned to be "relevant", which wasn't the allure of country music at all.
Looking back, John Denver was probably more country than the so-called country artists of the era. The Eagles were more country than the country hit-makers. No wonder Olivia Newton-John won Female Vocalist of the Year at the 1974 CMA's.
I liked Connie Smith, Faron Young, Merle, Johnny Rodriguez, and Gene Watson. In my early twenties, I was a fossil.
The new gal, Barbara Mandrell, had potential. There's no denying she was cute. She was tiny with huge hair. She could actually play an instrument. She liked real country, until she didn't. By the time she was sleeping single in a double bed, I was over her. Before that, though, she did songs that were "updated" country -- still country, but bowing to the hipness of the nineteen seventies. I wanted to be hip, too, so I decided Barbara would be my new go-to girl.
She did songs like this:
And this:
So I bought the Midnight Angel album. It had one good song, and that was the title track. That was my life of buying country albums, yet I persisted. It was apparently important to have that album cover on one's shelf.
I bought Dave and Sugar. That's a relic of the seventies, if ever there was one.
Country albums were a retail lie. Stick the number one single on it and the rubes will buy it. Three dollars and ninety-nine cents in the bank!
The only artist who was making actual albums in the seventies was Merle.
You can't count "Wanted: The Outlaws". That was a slapped-together conglomeration of outtakes, the brainchild of a prescient record producer.
Certainly there were some other stellar albums released during the decade.
...but sadly, very few.
If one was to purchase albums, to, I guess, have on their shelf (singles were so much more prudent -- no waste -- and by the seventies, marked down to eighty-nine cents), here are some of the better bets:
Folks who don't know think the seventies were Kenny Rogers and Willie and Dolly. In fact, those artists were "almost eighties". There was a long-spanning decade between Tammy Wynette and Janie Fricke. One had to root out the Crystals and the Sylvias from the Gene Watsons. And trust me, there was a world of difference. If only for Gene Watson, the seventies were worth the pain.
Music is music is music. The vast majority of it is bad. We need to remember the jewels.
I still don't know what I'll ever do with my Barbara Mandrell albums, though.
Thursday, March 22, 2012
Larry Gatlin and/or Larry Gatlin and the Gatlin Brothers
Saturday afternoon, I flipped on the news channel, to pass the time while I was eating my cottage cheese and carrot sticks (yep, back on ye old diet again!), and lo and behold, there was Larry Gatlin!
Larry was being interviewed about some political thing (I wasn't paying real close attention, as I was also reading the newspaper ~ I like to multi-task), and then he broke out his acoustic and started singing a song! I thought, well, that's different! "And now, let's welcome Karl Rove. Karl, what are you gonna sing for us today?" Just seemed a bit incongruous.
Nevertheless, I thought, wow, Larry Gatlin. I hadn't thought about him since sometime in the early nineteen eighties. And then I thought, well, he did have a bunch of great songs, he and his brothers, or just he. Depends upon which iteration of the Larry Gatlin show we're talking about.
I had (have?) maybe three Larry Gatlin albums, and that doesn't sound like much, but I didn't have a bunch of disposable income back then, by the by.
We're such a disposable society that we are quick to forget artists who, at one time, were hugely popular. Shoot, even I tend to forget them, and I'm supposed to be the historian here.
And there are a bunch from the 1970's. Larry Gatlin is but one.
The sad (bad?) thing about guys or gals who toiled and toiled until they finally made it big, is that we remember the hit songs, but those are generally the ones that are the most annoying ~ if for no other reason than from the sheer repetition on the radio. And we forget the little gems that maybe charted around number 45, but in hindsight, they were the better songs.
If you know the name Larry Gatlin at all, you're probably thinking, "All the Gold in California". Right? Sure, that's the one that people know. It's not that that is a bad song, but it was the biggest hit, and therefore, I rapidly became sick to death of it.
But Larry recorded......and wrote, by the way.....a lot of good songs. So, I'm going to try to find some of them on YouTube.
"Bitter They Are, Harder They Fall" was written by Larry, and surprisingly, to me, was also recorded by Elvis. I don't remember this, but it must be true. I may search out the Elvis version, but I will forewarn myself ~ I am not a fan of the 70's bombastic Elvis, so I probably won't like it as much as Larry's version.
Here, however, is a live performance of Larry with one of the truest country voices ever, Gene Watson, doing, "Harder They Fall":
My favorite Larry Gatlin song came early in his career; "I Don't Wanna Cry":
Here is Larry with the brothers, and "Statues Without Hearts":
Another with the brothers....Not overly fond of this song, probably because it has that dated, seventies, disco-like beat. "Nighttime Magic":
And now the one we've all been waiting for. I was a bit harsh earlier, because this is a good song. Again, I am a bit biased because I heard it thirteen million times on the radio, and I don't care if the song is by blah blah blah (insert the name of the most wonderful artist in the world here), if you hear a song thirteen million times, you're going to grow to hate it. Although it did have that excellent cowbell at the beginning, and one can never have enough cowbell (as we are well aware).
I apologize in advance for the mono sound quality, but I much prefer performance videos to a static picture of someone superimposed over a recorded song.
Thus, "All The Gold in California":
Aside from "I Don't Wanna Cry", my favorite Larry Gatlin and/or Larry Gatlin and the Gatlin Brothers song is "Houston", recorded in 1983.
I was able to find a live performance video of the song that someone was nice enough to upload. It's the Larry Gatlin that I saw on the news channel; more mature. The curly black locks have now become wavy-ish gray locks, but he still sings real good. I did have to chuckle at someone's comment; "Why is one of the brothers wearing a dress?":
As I said earlier, there are a bunch of artists from the seventies that we really shouldn't forget, and Larry Gatlin is definitely one. I would like to turn this into a series; much like my writers series, that I started and sort of, well, to be honest, forgot about.
My theory (one of them) about music is that we get used to a certain "sound", and anything that doesn't sound like that "sound" is considered old; outdated; and therefore, inferior. I have that problem with old Hank Williams recordings, for example. I had to learn to appreciate the songs, and overlook the "sound", because it was tinny and mono, and I was used to something a bit fuller.
And, I guess, it's even worse now. Everything now is recorded really "hot", so that's the sound people are used to. I would argue that it's rather muddy and overdone, but that's my bias.
The problem with becoming enamored of a sound is that one tends to overrate inferior songs, and dismiss the really good ones.
What I would like to do with this blog is to highlight the "good ones". Larry Gatlin is a good one.
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