Porter Wagoner & The Wagonmasters - Porter Wagoner Show

Porter Wagoner Show
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Album Details: Porter Wagoner Show

Release Date:01/01/1963
UPC:

Track List: Porter Wagoner Show

  1. Howdy Neighbor Howdy
  2. Misery Loves Company
  3. Head Over Heels in Love With You
  4. I Didn't Mean It
  5. Foggy Mountain Top
  6. Sweet Fern
  7. Medley: Haven't You Heard/Eat Dr...
  8. I Thought of God
  1. Sally Goodin
  2. Come on In (And Make Yourself a ...
  3. My Baby's Not Here (In Town Toni...
  4. Talk Back Trembling Lips
  5. Private Little World
  6. Find Out
  7. Old Log Cabin for Sale
  8. John Henry

Pro Reviews: Porter Wagoner Show

  • All Music Guide

    The Porter Wagoner Show is a studiobound affair meant to capitalize upon his television success, but if Wagoner was selling out it's because so many were buying. After a decade in the business and a few years with his own TV program, Wagoner had refined his honky tonk into a slicker, more professional beast, a show pony instead of a bucking bronco, smoother than the nononsense hard country that made his name. Here he revisits some big hits ("A Satisfied Mind," "I've Enjoyed as Much of This as I Can Stand," "Company's Comin'") backed by the Wagonmasters before an audience that may be live but is obviously beholden to the "Applause" sign. Second bananas Norma Jean and Curly Harris get their moments to show off as well. Four years before being deposed in favor of Dolly Parton, Miss Norma Jean proves her worth with fine renditions of "Silver Threads and Golden Needles" and "I Want to Live Again." Curly Harris gets to tell some cornpone hillbilly gags about his drunken father and ugly girlf...riend ("That was the only girl I ever seen with two backs"), but the jokes are probably funnier when accompanied by his gawky, popeyed visage. The Wagonmasters' instrumental version of "Bill Bailey" is the most downhome moment on the album, but it's still a little too polite for its own good. Porter Wagoner made hotter, harder country records before and after the release of this television souvenier (sponsored by the Chattanooga Medicine Company), but it isn't a total loss, and The Porter Wagoner Show documents an early attempt at the mainstreaming of countrywestern music. - Fred Beldin, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Porter Wagoner

Porter Wagoner, the Thin Man from the West Plains, is a case of an artist often ahead of his time who has always appeared hopelessly behind the times. He's among the most immediately recognizable figures in country music, largely due to his exploitation of TV and flashy costumes a good 20 years before the video boom. And while he's forever perceived as the man who tri... Read more