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viewing 1 To 16 of 16 items
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2CD
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HS 1035CD
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The Highwaymen live at the Kellogg Center, Battle Creek, MI on April 15th, 1993. With a powerhouse lineup of Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings, Kris Kristofferson, and Willie Nelson, the Highwaymen were country music's ultimate supergroup. Broadcast on local station WBCK-FM, this two-disc set presents two hours of music from their April 15, 1993 concert at the Kellogg Center in Battle Creek, Michigan. Besides a few songs from their first album, the quartet also performed many of the hits from their solo careers, including such country classics as "I Walk the Line", "Me and Bobby McGee", "Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain", and "Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way". The entire WBCK-FM broadcast is presented here, digitally remastered, with background liners.
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HS 1030CD
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Reba McEntire, Live from Gilley's, Pasadena, Texas on August 4th, 1985. Reba McEntire had just become one of the biggest names in country music by the time of this show at Gilley's nightclub the show was broadcasted on KKBQ-FM radio in August 1985. It features performances of early McEntire hits like "(You Lift Me) Up To Heaven," "You're the First Time I've Thought About Leaving," and "Can't Even Get the Blues." Also included are covers of classics by Patsy Cline, Jerry Lee Lewis, George Jones, and Ray Price. Includes background liners.
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2CD
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HS 1026CD
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In early 1977, David Bromberg, already established as one of the most entertaining performers on the US concert circuit, had just released his most successful album, How Late'll Ya Play 'Til, in 1976. This FM broadcast of a show at Utica, New York's Stanley Theater features songs from most of his 1970s albums, blending rock, blues, bluegrass, Celtic folk, and more, and punctuated by his trademark comic raps. Included is a 12-minute version of his showstopping signature tune, "Will Not Be Your Fool." The complete broadcast is presented here in digitally remastered sound with background liners.
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2CD
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HS 1024CD
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In the late 1980s, Lyle Lovett's first two albums established him as one of country music's brightest new stars. With his Large Band, he sings most of the songs from those records on this March 22, 1988, broadcast on KBCO-FM in Boulder, Colorado, performed at the local Boulder's Coast Club. Highlights include versions of his hits "Cowboy Man" (with a guest appearance by bluegrass stars Hot Rize) and "She's No Lady," as well as preview of a couple songs from his third album, 1989's Lyle Lovett and His Large Band. The complete broadcast is presented here in digitally remastered sound.
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HS 1023CD
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On April 18, 1990, shortly after the release of their self-titled third album, The Silos performed about 75 minutes of music for the SNAP alternative music radio program. Broadcast on KCRW in Santa Monica, California, near Los Angeles, it features versions of all but one song from that third album, as well as selections from their earlier pair of records. Both of the singer-songwriter-guitarists from the band's early days, Walter Salas-Humara and Bob Rupe, were in the lineup for this broadcast. The complete broadcast is presented here in digitally remastered sound with background liners.
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2CD
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HS 1025CD
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Hoyt Axton was one of the most versatile singer-songwriters in popular music, combining folk, rock, and country with a zany sense of humor. Originally broadcast on KFAT-FM in Gilroy, California, these July 19, 1982 performances at The Saddle Rack in San Jose include versions of his country hits "When the Morning Comes," "Boney Fingers," "Flash of Fire," "Della and the Dealer," "A Rusty Old Halo," and "Wild Bull Rider." It also features his own interpretations of songs he composed or co-composed that became big pop hits for Three Dog Night ("Joy to the World," "Never Been to Spain") and Ringo Starr ("No No Song"), as well as appearances from April Axton, Jana Lee Dare, Teresa Tate, and Mark Dawson. The complete broadcast is presented here in digitally remastered sound with background liners.
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HS 1017CD
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In the mid-1980s, the mother-daughter duo of Naomi and Wynonna Judd became one of the hottest acts in country music, reeling off five straight number-one country singles in 1984 and 1985. All of those chart-toppers -- "Mama He's Crazy," "Why Not Me," "Girls' Night Out," "Love Is Alive," and "Have Mercy" -- were included in this October 27, 1985 concert at Hampton Coliseum in Hampton, Virginia. Broadcast on WCSM-FM in Hampton as part of the Silver Eagle Cross Country Radio series, it also includes highlights from their debut EP and first pair of albums, as well as covers of Rodney Crowell's "One Way Rider" and Little Richard's "Rip It Up." The entire broadcast is presented here in digitally remastered sound with background liners.
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HS 1015CD
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By the time Merle Haggard played Nashville's Opryland theme park in 1982, he had a decade and a half of country stardom under his belt. He draws on one of the deepest repertoires in popular music on this Silver Eagle radio broadcast, including such mammoth hits as "Okie from Muskogee," "Workin' Man Blues," "Big City," and "I Think I'll Just Stay Here and Drink." The two-dozen-song set also includes less familiar tunes that testify to Haggard's astonishing versatility, including covers of classics by Bob Wills, Lefty Frizzell, and Jimmie Rodgers, as well as his hit duet with Leona Williams, "The Bull & the Beaver." The complete broadcast is presented here in digitally remastered sound with background liners.
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2LP
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HS 1011LP
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By the mid-1970s, Johnny Cash had an enormous catalog of classics upon which to draw for his live performances. Backed by the Tennessee Three, he offers a wealth of them on this October 2, 1976, appearance on the Jamboree USA show, broadcast on WWVA in Wheeling, West Virginia. Sprinkled among the hits from the '50s, '60s, and '70s are folk tunes and B-side gems, as well as a few contributions from Anita Carter, the Carter Family, Jan Howard, and Johnny's wife, June Carter Cash. The broadcast is presented here in its entirety, with digitally remastered sound and background notes. Pressed on 180-gram vinyl.
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HS 1013CD
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Regarding the style he developed as leader of The Charlie Daniels Band, Charlie Daniels told Rolling Stone in 1976, "Our stuff is kinda like Western swing, but with a much harder beat to it and a lot funkier. There's more emphasis on feeling 'cause I don't play perfect fiddle at all. I call it Southern swing." In a story in the same magazine three years later that described one of his performances as touching "on boogie, blues, swing, rock and bluegrass," he elaborated, "Anything that I feel is right to do musically, I'll do. To hell with what genre it falls into. As long as it sounds good, what difference does it make? There's too many people that have a stilted attitude toward things... I wish I could play to every man, woman and child on this planet at the same time, I really do." This complete 1987 radio broadcast is presented in digitally remastered sound with background liners.
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HS 1020CD
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In the late 1970s, Dolly Parton, having already established herself as a country superstar, was on the verge of crossing over to a bigger pop audience. This May 14, 1977, performance, broadcast as part of the Live at the Bottom Line radio series, was recorded on the final evening of a three-night engagement at New York's prestigious Bottom Line club that marked her first concerts in the Big Apple. In addition to the big hits "Coat of Many Colors," "I Will Always Love You," "Jolene," All I Can Do," "The Seeker," and "Love Is Like a Butterfly," the set also features songs from her 1977 album New Harvest... First Gathering, as well as a Parton composition ("Do I Ever Cross Your Mind") she wouldn't release for another five years. The complete broadcast is presented here in digitally remastered sound with background liners.
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HS 1016CD
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In the mid-1970s, Waylon Jennings had just risen to country music superstardom as a figurehead of the outlaw movement. Originally broadcast in 1975 on KAFM/KLRD in Dallas, Texas, these performances from the city's Electric Ballroom include the hits "I'm a Ramblin' Man," "You Ask Me To," "Amanda," "Good Hearted Woman," "Clyde," "Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way," and "Bob Wills Is Still the King." Also featured is "Storms Never Last," which would become a duet hit for Jennings and his wife Jessi Colter, along with highlights from his 1975 album Dreaming My Dreams. The complete broadcast is presented here in digitally remastered sound with background liners.
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HS 1014CD
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The Marshall Tucker Band was formed in Spartanburg, SC, in 1971 and went on to become one of the major southern rock bands of the '70s, combining rock, country, blues, and jazz with innovative instrumentation from songwriter and lead guitarist Toy Caldwell. Their Record Plant session in Sausalito, CA, on May 8, 1974, produces near-visual flashes of energy and inspiration, confirming the acclaim bestowed upon their self-titled debut, which went gold in 1975. The entire KSAN-FM broadcast of this performance is presented here with digitally remastered sound, comprehensive background liners, and rare photos.
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HS 1012CD
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In the late 1970s, Waylon Jennings had ridden the crest of the outlaw movement to become a country music superstar. On this WSM Nashville broadcast of an October 12, 1978, performance at the Grand Ole Opry, he sang many of his biggest hits of the decade, including the one that had just topped the country charts, "I've Always Been Crazy." Other highlights include his solo version of his #1 duet hit with Willie Nelson, "Mammas Don't Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Cowboys," and his cover of Neil Young's "Are You Ready for the Country." The broadcast is presented here in its entirety, with digitally remastered sound and background liners.
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HS 1011CD
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By the mid-1970s, Johnny Cash had an enormous catalog of classics upon which to draw for his live performances. Backed by the Tennessee Three, he offers a wealth of them on this October 2, 1976, appearance on the Jamboree USA show, broadcast on WWVA in Wheeling, West Virginia. Sprinkled among the hits from the '50s, '60s, and '70s are folk tunes and B-side gems, as well as a few contributions from Anita Carter, the Carter Family, and Johnny's wife, June Carter Cash. The broadcast is presented here in its entirety, with digitally remastered sound and background notes.
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2CD
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HS 1010CD
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Such is the depth of his repertoire that Willie Nelson had no trouble filling up two hours and 15 minutes on this July 1, 1976, broadcast from Dallas radio station KAFM-FM. With a little help from occasional guest vocalists Jody Payne and Bee Spears (both part of his band), as well as fellow outlaw David Allan Coe, he ran through material spanning the beginning of his career as a songwriter through his 1975 hit album Red Headed Stranger. In addition to the hits "Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain" and "Good Hearted Woman," this includes his own interpretations of songs he wrote that were hits for others, such as "Crazy" and "Funny How Time Slips Away," as well as covers of classics like "Jambalaya," "Truck Drivin' Man," and "Goodnight, Irene." The broadcast is presented here in its entirety, with digitally remastered sound and background notes.
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