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Lefty Frizzell - Saginaw, Michigan

Saginaw, Michigan
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Album Details: Saginaw, Michigan

Release Date:01/01/1964
UPC:

Track List: Saginaw, Michigan

  1. What Good Did You Get (Out of Br...
  2. There's No Food in This House
  3. When It Rains the Blues
  4. I'm Not the Man I'm Supposed to Be
  1. I Was Coming Home to You
  2. Don't Let Her See Me Cry
  3. Lonely Heart

Pro Reviews: Saginaw, Michigan

  • All Music Guide

    The career of this great country singer in some ways went in the opposite manner of other performers who came out of the honky tonk tradition. Usually the earlier recordings of this genre of country singers are the really good ones, with later productions tending to be saturated with the background choruses, string sections, and downplayed picking which passed for fancy productions once Nashville started going Pop like the weasel. However, in the case of Frizzell, this earlier album is one of the ones with somewhat excessive production, and the later recordings sport a more toned-down bar band sound, heavy on the barrelhouse piano. Not that the production here is really that obtrusive. Certainly other country singers have fallen much more the victim to their background singers than this man, who would sound good with a steam hammer and the entire roller-skating staff of a drive-in diner trying to back him up. The title song was of course a huge hit, and if there was ever a town that is... too dull to deserve such a great song, "Saginaw, Michigan" would be it. "There's No Food in This House" is a chillingly understated Merle Kilgore number, the singer admitting that he "used to ask what there was for supper, now I don't ask anymore." The conclusion of the song involving a delivery of food from the good-hearted folks at a nearby church may rub some cynical listeners the wrong way. "Hello to Him" is an out and out classic, one of the best songs the artist ever recorded, while the jumping "James River" even sports a banjo in the arrangement, despite this instrument having been practically banned from Nashville recording studios. The best of this material is typical Lefty Frizzell -- in other words, some of the best country music around. - Eugene Chadbourne, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Lefty Frizzell

Lefty Frizzell was the definitive honky tonk singer, the vocalist that set the style for generations of vocalists that followed him. Frizzell smoothed out the rough edges of honky tonk by singing longer, flowing phrases essentially, he made honky tonk more acceptable for the mainstream without losing its gritty, barroom roots. In the process, he changed the way country... Read more