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Brian Hyland - Country Meets Folk

Country Meets Folk
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Album Details: Country Meets Folk

Release Date:01/01/1964
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Pro Reviews: Country Meets Folk

  • All Music Guide

    Teen idols faced a dilemma with the paradigmshift of the mid'60s and the rising popularity of rock groups and singersongwriters. They could make adult contemporary pop like Bobby Vinton, experiment with British Invasion sounds like Bobby Vee, or turn to country music like George Hamilton IV. Brian Hyland briefly followed Hamilton's lead with Country and Folk, but hedged his bets with the pop audience by putting the word "folk" in the title of what is mainly a country record. Hyland covers big country hits like "Act Naturally," "Folsom Prison," "The Blizzard" and "Open Pit Mine" as well as a handful of folk songs that were, in many cases, widely recorded among country artists. "The Blizzard" and "Open Pit Mine" use a banjo, but Hyland also dips into blues ("Baby, What You Want Me to Do") and rock ("Candy Man"). The backing group, the 21 Strings, doesn't refer to an orchestra but to a small combo of 12string guitar, bass and banjo. In retrospect Country Meets Folk seems doomed from its i...nception, but it's interesting to hear Hyland attempt this kind of material. - Greg Adams, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Brian Hyland

Initially aiming his output at teens, Brian Hyland grew up fast and cut a serious cover of "Gypsy Woman," a hit by the Impressions that went gold in 1970. The Queens, NY, native enjoyed his biggest hit at the tender age of 16 the tonguetwisting "Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polkadot Bikini," a cute ditty snapped up by Kapp Records after it was issued on the little L... Read more