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Johnny Horton - 1956-1960 (CD)

1956-1960
$105.97
5 out of 5.0 stars 2 Ratings (0 Reviews)

Album Details: 1956-1960

Release Date:06/27/1994
Label:Bear Family
UPC:790051154707

Track List: 1956-1960

Disk 2

  1. Counterfeit Love
  2. Mister Moonlight
  3. All Grown Up
  4. Got the Bull by the Horns
  5. When It's Springtime in Alaska (...
  6. Whispering Pines
  7. Battle of New Orleans
  8. All for the Love of a Girl
  9. Lost Highway
  10. Sam Magee
  11. Cherokee Boogie
  12. Golden Rocket
  13. Battle of New Orleans [British V...
  14. Joe's Been A-Gittin' There
  15. First Train Headin' South
  16. Got the Bull by the Horns
  1. Sal's Got a Sugarlip [Rock 'N' R...
  2. Words
  3. Johnny Reb
  4. Sal's Got a Sugarlip
  5. Ole Slew Foot
  6. I'm Ready if You're Willing
  7. Take Me Like I Am
  8. They Shined Up Rudolph's Nose
  9. Electrified Donkey
  10. Same Old Tale the Crow Told Me
  11. Sink the Bismarck
  12. Sink the Bismarck [Alternate Take]
  13. Same Old Tale the Crow Told Me
  14. All Grown Up
  15. Got the Bull by the Horns

Disk 3

  1. Ole Slew Foot
  2. Miss Marcy
  3. Sleepy Eyed John
  4. Mansion You Stole
  5. They'll Never Take Her Love from Me
  6. Sinking of the Reuben James
  7. Jim Bridger
  8. Battle of Bull Run
  9. Snow-Shoe Thompson
  10. John Paul Jones
  11. Comanche (The Brave Horse)
  12. Young Abe Lincoln (Make a Tall, ...
  13. O'Leary's Cow
  14. Johnny Freedom
  15. Go North!
  1. North to Alaska
  2. North to Alaska
  3. I Just Don't Like This Kind of L...
  4. Rock Island Line
  5. Hank and Joe and Me
  6. Golden Rocket
  7. A-Sleepin' at the Foot of the Bed
  8. I Just Don't Like This Kind of L...
  9. Old Blind Barnabas
  10. Evil Hearted Me
  11. Hot in the Sugarcane Field
  12. You Don't Move Me Baby Anymore
  13. Gosh-Darn Wheel
  14. Broken Hearted Gypsy
  15. Church by the Side of the Road

Disk 4

  1. Vanishing Race
  2. Broken Hearted Gypsy
  3. That Boy Got the Habit
  4. Hot in the Sugarcane Field
  5. You Don't Move Me Baby Anymore
  6. Church by the Side of the Road
  7. I Just Don't Like This Kind of L...
  8. Take It Like a Man
  9. Hank and Joe and Me
  10. Golden Rocket
  11. Old Blind Barnabas
  12. Empty Bed Blues
  13. Rock Island Line
  14. Shake, Rattle and Roll
  15. A-Sleepin' at the Foot of the Bed
  16. Old Dan Tucker
  17. Gosh Darn Wheel
  1. From Memphis to Mobile
  2. Back Up Train
  3. Schottische in Texas
  4. Take It Like a Man
  5. That Boy Got the Habit
  6. My Heart Stopped, Trembled and Died
  7. Alley Girl Ways
  8. How You Gonna Make It
  9. Witch Walking Baby
  10. Down That River Road
  11. Big Wheels Rollin'
  12. I Got a Slow Leak in My Heart
  13. You Don't Move Me Baby Anymore
  14. What Will I Do Without You
  15. Janey
  16. Streets of Dodge
  17. Give Me Back My Picture and You ...

Pro Reviews: 1956-1960

  • All Music Guide

    This Bear Family box documents the last four years of Johnny Horton's life as a recording and performing artist. It is the second box set issue in their extensive -- in fact, complete -- Johnny Horton oeuvre. The first documented the Cormac, Abbott, and Mercury recordings as well as two albums' worth of demos and overdubs released while he was alive. This four-CD collection contains Horton's complete issued recordings, unreleased demos, and outtakes as well as overdubbed recordings issued between 1964 and 1969 (during the decade after his death) and working demos. Horton's final period at Columbia is what people (most people) remember. These were the years of "Sink the Bismarck," "Battle of New Orleans," "Honky Tonk Man," "Rock Island Line," "Ole Slewfoot," "The Same Ole Tale the Crow Told Me," his devastating recording of "Lost Highway," as well as his final monster singles recorded in August of 1960 (a mere three months before he was killed in an auto accident), "Go North" and "North... to Alaska" (for a soundtrack). Unlike his peers during the later years -- Johnny Cash, Webb Pierce, Faron Young, and others -- Horton exhibited not only an easy amiability but a combination of confidence and vulnerability. It was as if he knew that making music came naturally to him but couldn't understand why anybody would make a big deal out of it. Here are the songs that ran the gamut of rockabilly, hard honky tonk, hillbilly boogie, blues, patriotic songs of the South, cowboy tunes, and even a recording of "Empty Bed Blues," which Bessie Smith had recorded 30 years before. While most Bear Family boxes -- because of their elaborate packaging, liner notes that resemble full critical biographies, and import prices -- are not for everyone, this set is an exception. Rock roll fans interested in the early music, hardcore honky tonk fans, and of course Horton nuts will have to have this. The earlier set would have even more limited appeal, but the sheer quality of the music issued here transcends its genre, time, and place and is eternal in postwar musical history. Highly recommended. - Thom Jurek, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Johnny Horton

Although he is better-remembered for his historical songs, Johnny Horton was one of the best and most popular honky tonk singers of the late '50s. Horton managed to infuse honky tonk with an urgent rockabilly underpinning. His career may have been cut short by a fatal car crash in 1960, but his music reverberated throughout the next three decades.Horton was born in Los ... Read more