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Sheb Wooley - Wild and Wooley, Big Unruly Me (CD)

Wild and Wooley, Big Unruly Me
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Album Details: Wild and Wooley, Big Unruly Me

Release Date:09/24/1997
Label:Bear Family
UPC:790051615024

Track List: Wild and Wooley, Big Unruly Me

  1. Recipe For Love
  2. I'm Too Young
  3. Magic Town
  4. Till The End Of The World
  5. Meet Mr. Lonely
  6. Sweet Chile
  7. Will I Ever
  8. Where
  9. Cherry Sweet
  10. So Close To Heaven
  11. More
  12. Careless Hands
  13. Big Ole, Good Ole Girl
  14. One Of Them Roarin' Songs
  15. Buba Hoo Babe Dee
  1. Little Bitty Bilbo Abernathy
  2. Nathan Allen Quincy Jones
  3. Free Again
  4. The Little Girl's Gone
  5. My Only Treasure
  6. Plenty Of Love
  7. Mississippi Twist
  8. Deep Goes M' Love
  9. I Won't Come Back
  10. Hootenanny Hoot
  11. Wild And Wooley, Big Unruly Me (1)
  12. That Girl Next Door
  13. It's Almost Time
  14. Give The Ball To Willie B.

Pro Reviews: Wild and Wooley, Big Unruly Me

  • All Music Guide

    Sheb Wooley is best known to American novelty song fans as the cat who recorded "Purple People Eater" in 1958, a number one smash, and "That's My Pa" from 1962. Still others know him as the character Pete Nolan in the TV show Rawhide, or Ben Wilson in the film High Noon. But only collectors know about the astonishingly varied career Wooley created between roughly the end of 1956 and 1971. This is the second volume of his work issued by Bear Family. The first, Purple People Eater, concentrated mostly on hits and all of the novelty songs that scored in an even minor way. Wild and Wooley, Big Unruly Me fixes its sites on the more obscure recordings, a couple minor hits, and rare unissued tracks and B-sides from 1957-1970. Few tracks on either set concentrate on Wooley's voluminous country music catalog, which is now the subject of a BF four-CD box set. Here is the near doo wop "Recipe for Love" juxtaposed against the rockabilly/calypso (?) mishmash that is "I'm Too Young." But there's als...o the wacky "Sweet Chile," which is part Cajun, part Bo Diddley, and part Pat Boone There's an absolutely dreadful rendition of "'Til The End of the World," which was a hit for Jim Reeves, and a knockout rock roll tune called "Mississippi Twist" that went unreleased until this volume appeared. Ultimately there are a few of the nuttier novelty numbers here, such as "Buba Hoo, Baba Dee," the title track in a different version than the one that appears on Purple People Eater, "One of Them Roarin' Songs," and "Little Bitty Bilbo Abernathy." The only thing the tracks seem to share is the warm baritone Wooley effortlessly displayed in his younger years -- that and his restlessness for any kind of song. Highly recommended as one of pop roll's true oddities. - Thom Jurek, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Sheb Wooley

Among popculture scholars, Sheb Wooley is best remembered for his late'50s rock roll/comedy hit "Purple People Eater," which sold over three million copies. But among country music afficianados, especially fans of cowboy songs, Sheb Wooley is the real article, or as near as one gets to it in modern times. A rodeo rider from the time that he was a boy, he was making a l... Read more