Discography Pure Country
Transcription
Discography Pure Country
Discography PureCountry By Ryan LaCroix Our discography of the foremost recordings, fifty strong and representing every possible variety of country music, is a medley of one-name superstars, artists from way back when, and rare gems still available at record stores and online. Keith Anderson, Three Chord Country and American Rock & Roll (Arista Nashville, 2005) Miami native Keith Anderson was raised on a healthy dose of Lynyrd Skynyrd and Willie Nelson. After brief stints as a bodybuilder, construction engineer, and telegram singer, the former 86 September/October 2011 Oklahoma State baseball player rediscovered his love of country music and headed to Nashville. Anderson made a big first impression with his 2005 debut, charting four songs, two of which—“Pickin’ Wildflowers” and “Every Time I Hear Your Name”—landed in the top ten. Gene Autry, The Essential Gene Autry: 1933-1946 (Columbia/Legacy, 1992) Raised in the southern Oklahoma towns of Achille and Ravia, Gene Autry would eventually become the only person to have stars in each of the five categories of the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Encouraged by Will Rogers, who heard him singing as a telegraph operator in Chelsea, Autry began performing in 1928 on KVOO in Tulsa. The real gem in this collection is Autry’s 1941 version of “Blueberry Hill,” recorded fifteen years before Fats Domino made it an international hit. Hoyt Axton, Life Machine (A&M, 1974) Hoyt Axton was a freshman football player at Oklahoma State University and a heavyweight champion boxer in the navy before singing folk songs in San Francisco coffeehouses. The burly balladeer is best known for his songwriting: Three Dog Night’s “Joy to the World” and Steppenwolf ’s “The Pusher” are among his compositions. The Duncan native’s biggest solo success came with this 1974 album and its top-ten hits, “Boney Fingers” and “When the Morning Comes,” a duet with Linda Ronstadt. Discography four number-one hits, including “Neon Moon” and “Boot Scootin’ Boogie,” which launched the line-dancing craze of the 1990s. Norma Jean, Pretty Miss Norma Jean (RCA Victor, 1965) Norma Jean Beasler’s country career began early, as a radio host on KLPR in Oklahoma City at age twelve and as Merl Lindsay’s tour mate at age sixteen. Still, the Wellston native is most remembered as a regular on The Porter Wagoner Show, where she often dueted with the shows’ namesake star. This 1965 album includes two top tens, “I Wouldn’t Buy a Used Car From Him” and “Go Cat Go.” Jason Boland & the Stragglers, Comal County Blue (Thirty Tigers, 2008) Produced by Lloyd Maines and dedicated to the late Bob Childers, Comal County Blue was a breakthrough for Jason Boland & the Stragglers. On the eve of the album’s release, Boland ruptured a vocal cord, an injury that almost ended his career. Thankfully, the Harrah singer recovered, and the band’s independently released album charted in the top thirty on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart. Johnny Bond, Songs That Made Him Famous (Starday, 1963) Born outside Marietta in tiny Enville, Oklahoma, Johnny Bond developed an interest in music after buying a ninety-eight-cent ukulele from a mail-order catalog. After being part of the Jimmy Wakely Trio and Gene Autry’s sideman, the Country Music Hall of Famer landed appearances on television shows like Melody Ranch and Town Hall Party and several films. This compilation includes his songs from the late 1940s and early 1950s, such as “Divorce Me C.O.D.” and “Cimarron,” which was covered by Johnny Cash and Jimmy Dean. Brooks & Dunn, Brand New Man (Arista Nashville, 1991) For nearly two decades, adoring female fans placed roses at Ronnie Dunn’s boots while he played at venues like Tulsa City Limits. In 1991, Nashville record executive and Grove native Tim DuBois paired Dunn with Kix Brooks in what would become the most successful country music duo of all time. Their debut album sold more than six million copies and spawned to record a song Johnny Cash had turned down, “Skip a Rope.” The song touched on controversial topics like hypocrisy, domestic violence, and racial prejudice, topped the country chart for five weeks, and earned the Northwest Classen graduate appearances on The Tonight Show and The Mike Douglas Show. Garth Brooks, No Fences (Capitol Nashville, 1990) After years of playing places like Shotgun Sam’s Pizza Parlor in Midwest City and Willies Saloon in Stillwater, Garth Brooks saw international fame come his way with his sophomore album. It remains the Yukon native’s bestseller to date, with seventeen million copies sold in the United States. All four singles— “Friends in Low Places,” “Unanswered Prayers,” “Two of a Kind, Workin’ on a Full House,” and “The Thunder Rolls”—became number-one blockbusters. Soon, audiences across the world would be taken with the wireless headset-wearing, high-energy, arena-rocking Okie. Bob Childers, Hat Trick (Binky, 1999) Widely considered the godfather of the red-dirt genre, Bob Childers was something of a spiritual figure for many. The Ponca City native’s vocal style earned him comparisons to Bob Dylan, while his lyrics are in the same vein as Woody Guthrie’s. Twelve of his 1,500plus songs were released on Hat Trick, notably “I Dreamed That I Had Wings” and a song cowritten by Childers, Greg Jacobs, and Garth Brooks, “Luck of the Draw.” Henson Cargill, Skip a Rope (Monument, 1968) In the mid-1960s, Henson Cargill was working as an Oklahoma County deputy sheriff and moonlighting at clubs when former Oklahoma deejay Tom Hartman, then in Nashville, encouraged him Roy Clark, Roy Clark in Concert (MCA, 1976) Roy Clark was cohost of the hugely popular southern comedy television show Hee Haw and an occasional guest host for Johnny Carson on The Tonight Show. In 1976, he moved to Tulsa, played a OklahomaToday.com 87 Discography sold-out eighteen-date tour behind the Iron Curtain during the Cold War, and released this live album. Recorded in Las Vegas, it’s a perfect representation of Clark’s world-class guitar playing and legendary wit. Highlights include “Dueling Banjos” and “Malagueña.” Kellie Coffey, When You Lie Next to Me (BNA, 2002) After graduating from the University of Oklahoma with a vocal performance degree, Kellie Coffey moved to Los Angeles, making ends meet as a singing waitress before recording songs for Disney theme parks and the television show Walker, Texas Ranger. Her 2002 countrypop debut earned the Moore native comparisons to Faith Hill and Sara Evans, and the top-ten hit “When You Lie Next to Me” spent thirtythree weeks on the Billboard country song chart. Tommy Collins, Tommy Collins Callin’ (Starday, 1972) In 1952, Tommy Collins moved to California with his teenaged friend, Wanda Jackson, and her family, and Collins ended up staying. 88 September/October 2011 His first band there featured a then-unknown Buck Owens on guitar. Collins’ new sound, between the extremes of the Nashville Sound and honky-tonk, became a huge influence on the Bakersfield Sound later popularized by Owens and Merle Haggard. This 1972 album mostly includes songs the Bethany native wrote for others, notably “If You Ain’t Lovin’,” a hit for Faron Young and George Strait. Cross Canadian Ragweed, Soul Gravy (Universal South, 2004) The members of Cross Canadian Ragweed spent years perfecting their sound, from humble beginnings in the alley behind the 50 Yard Line in Yukon to rowdy nights at the original Wormy Dog Saloon in Stillwater. With Tecumseh’s Mike McClure producing, two tracks from this 2004 album charted: the Lee Ann Womack collaboration “Sick and Tired” and an updated version of fan favorite “Alabama.” Gail Davies, Givin’ Herself Away (Warner Bros., 1982) Before becoming country music’s first female record producer, Broken Bow native Gail Davies was a session singer for Neil Young and Hoyt Axton. In 1974, she dueted with Roger Miller on The Merv Griffin Show, passing on a European tour with Frank Zappa (who called Davies “the ballsiest chick he’d ever seen on stage”) to do so. Her 1982 album for six years, the Putnam City North graduate branched out on his own. On his 1995 solo debut, England mixed slowpaced ballads (“Smoke in Her Eyes”) with upbeat honky-tonk numbers (“Redneck Son”). The album’s first single, “Should’ve Asked Her Faster,” became the biggest hit of his career. charted a top-ten hit (“Round the Clock Lovin’”) and two top-twenty covers—Guy Mitchell’s “Singing the Blues” and Joni Mitchell’s “You Turn Me On (I’m a Radio).” Joe Diffie, Third Rock From the Sun (Epic, 1994) In the early 1980s, Joe Diffie worked at a Duncan foundry and gigged with the bluegrass band Special Edition. After the Velma native moved to Nashville in 1986, he crated boxes for a Gibson guitar plant and landed steady work as a demo singer. Loaded with humor and a blue-collar attitude, this 1994 album became his heavy hitter. It went platinum and charted five singles, with “Pickup Man” and “Third Rock From the Sun” hitting number one and “So Help Me Girl” peaking at number two. Vince Gill, I Still Believe in You (MCA, 1992) While in high school in Oklahoma City, Vince Gill played with local bands Bluegrass Revue and Mountain Smoke, then moved on to Pure Prairie League and later declined an offer to join Dire Straits. Gill’s sixth solo album scored him multiple vocalist of the year awards and features backing vocals from Alison Krauss, Lou Reed, and Delbert McClinton, among others. The title track was Gill’s first number one and landed him two Grammy awards. Ty England, Ty England (RCA Nashville, 1995) While playing an acoustic set at a Stillwater coffee shop, Ty England met his future college roommate, Garth Brooks. After playing guitar for Brooks “ Johnny Bond developed an interest in music after buying a ninety-eight-cent ukulele from a mail-order catalog. ” Otto Gray and His Oklahoma Cowboys, Early Cowboy Band (BACM, 2005) After fighting as a part of Teddy Roosevelt’s Rough Riders on San Juan Hill in 1898, Billy McGinty settled down in Ripley with his family. In May 1925, McGinty’s Oklahoma Cowboy Band played on KFRU in Bristow, becoming the first western string band to be broadcast nationally. When McGinty left to become a postmaster, Otto Gray—who grew up on a farm between Stillwater and Ripley—led the band around the country on vaudeville circuits. Gray’s band was the first to record the classic “Midnight Special,” and it became one of their most popular tunes. go bankrupt. But the Bethel Acres native didn’t let it deter his dream: He headed back to Nashville a decade later. His 1995 debut had a number-one hit in the title track and three top tens (“I’m Still Dancin’ With You,” “Don’t Stop,” and “What I Meant to Say”). The album also features five songs cowritten by Muskogee’s Chick Rains and one cowritten by Tulsan Ronnie Dunn. was singing country songs on KLPR in Oklahoma City. As rockabilly declined in the mid-1960s, it was no surprise that she ventured back into country music. The Maud native retains her fiery vocal style with this 1970 album. Featured here are the toptwenty “My Big Iron Skillet” and her cover of the Jimmy Webb-penned “By the Time I Get to Phoenix.” Gus Hardin, I’m Dancing as Fast as I Can (Rainy Day, 2001) Leon Russell once called Gus Hardin’s voice “a combination of Tammy Wynette, Otis Redding, and a truck driver.” That unique, bluesy voice earned her a Best New Female Vocalist award from the Academy of Country Music in 1984. Hardin died in a car accident after leaving a gig at Sunset Grill in Tulsa in 1996. This posthumous compilation features her two top-ten hits, “After the Last Goodbye” and a 1985 duet with Earl Thomas Conley, “All Tangled up in Love.” Becky Hobbs, All Keyed Up (MTM, 1988) Becky Hobbs grew up in Bartlesville listening to Bob Wills on KVOO and to music by Oklahomans like Patti Page and Woody Guthrie. She crossed paths with other Oklahomans along the way, too: She was friends with Roger Miller in LA and had Garth Brooks open for her at Bink’s in Stillwater in the mid-1980s. This honky-tonk growler of an album charted four songs, including “Jones on the Jukebox,” “Are There Any More Like You,” and “Do You Feel The Same Way Too?” Toby Keith, Unleashed (Dreamworks Nashville, 2002) A native of Clinton and Moore, Toby Keith formed the band Easy Money in 1982 while working as a derrick hand in the oil fields. Two decades later, he would release his seventh album, Unleashed, whose number-one hits included “Who’s Your Daddy?” and a duet with Willie Nelson, “Beer for My Horses.” The album was spearheaded by “Courtesy of the Red, White & Blue,” a song that displayed angry patriotism more pointedly than any since Merle Haggard’s 1970 song, “Fightin’ Side of Me.” Wade Hayes, Old Enough to Know Better (Columbia, 1995) After landing a record deal at eleven, Wade Hayes watched his label implode and his family Wanda Jackson, Country (Capitol, 1970) Before Elvis Presley encouraged her to play rockabilly, Wanda Jackson Wayne Kemp, Kentucky Sunshine (MCA, 1974) After singing at church and community events in Muldrow, where he grew up, OklahomaToday.com 89 Wayne Kemp joined Benny Ketchum as a guitarist at Cain’s Ballroom at age sixteen. In 1965, Kemp’s demo tape wound up in the hands of George Jones, who would record several of Kemp’s songs. He would also write for Conway Twitty and cowrite “One Piece at a Time” for Johnny Cash. This 1974 solo album is Kemp’s best, featuring a top-twenty hit with “Honky Tonk Wine.” Jimmy LaFave, Cimarron Manifesto (Red House, 2007) Jimmy LaFave honed his unique Americana sound in Stillwater, where he spent the latter part of his teens and his twenties. On Cimarron Manifesto, he pays tribute to his Oklahoma home with a Woody Guthrie-style protest song, “This Land,” and a JJ Cale name check on “Truth.” Listening to LaFave’s soulful voice and creative lyrics, it’s easy to see why one critic claimed that he “stands out like a pint of Guinness in a bar full of Miller Lites.” Miranda Lambert, Revolution (Columbia Nashville, 2009) Texas native Miranda Lambert became an Oklahoma transplant a few years back af- 90 September/October 2011 Discography “ Leon Russell once called Gus Hardin’s voice a combination of Tammy Wynette, Otis Redding, and a truck driver. ” ter purchasing seven hundred acres outside Tishomingo just down the road from thenfiancé Blake Shelton, whom she married this past May. In 2009, the acclaimed Revolution peaked at number one and won multiple awards the next year. Known for songs about cheating boyfriends and revenge, Lambert expanded her repertoire here with several excellent ballads. The album charted five songs, including two number ones, “The House That Built Me” and “Heart Like Mine.” Mel McDaniel, I’m Countryfied (Capitol, 1981) Inspired by Elvis Presley and Leon McAuliffe, Mel McDaniel began his career playing around Okmulgee at sock hops and weenie roasts. After bouncing around the United States, he kick-started his career with this 1981 album, which features two topten hits—the boot-stompin’ “Louisiana Saturday Night” and heartbreaking “Right in the Palm of Your Hand.” The title track brings it all back home with the simple lyrics, “Well I’m countryfied /I like my chicken fried.” Reba McEntire, For My Broken Heart (MCA, 1991) On March 16, 1991, seven members of Reba McEntire’s road band and her road manager were killed in an airplane crash. Seven months later, the Chockie native released her sixteenth studio album as, she said, “a form of healing for all our broken hearts.” The careful song selection yielded two number-one hits (the title track and “Is There Life Out There”) and McEntire’s cover of Vicki Lawrence’s 1972 song, “The Night the Lights Went Out in Georgia.” Jody Miller, Queen of the House (Capitol, 1965) Introduced to a record executive by Oklahoma actor Dale Robertson, Jody Miller was a folk musician thrust into the country music spotlight with this album. The Blanchard native won a Grammy for Best Female Country Vocal Performance in 1966 for the title track, a response to Roger Miller’s “King of the Road” that quickly became her signature song and landed her appearances on television shows such as Shindig, Hullabaloo, and American Bandstand. Roger Miller, The Return of Roger Miller (Smash, 1965) Raised in Erick in a family he described as “dirt poor,” Roger Miller took an early liking to Hank Williams and Bob Wills and learned his first guitar chords from his cousin-in-law, Sheb Wooley. Miller later served in the Korean War and worked as a singing bellhop and firefighter until making his mark as a songwriter. His most notable song is the five-time Grammy winner “King of the Road,” but this album also includes catchy ditties like “Do-WackaDo” and “You Can’t Roller Skate in a Buffalo Herd.” Patti Page, The Patti Page Collection: The Mercury Years, Vol. 1 (Island/ Mercury, 1991) The woman who became known as “the Singing Rage” became one of the first to overdub her own vocals on “Confess.” Straddling the line between country and pop, Page, a Claremore native, was the best-selling female Pride”). Although the group has gone through plenty of lineup changes over the years, two constants remain, Heath Wright and Greg Cook, both from Vian. singer of the 1950s. This twenty-song collection puts her smooth, warm voice on display, with “Tennessee Waltz,” “Mockin’ Bird Hill,” and “Conquest,” covered by the White Stripes more than sixty years later. Rascal Flatts, Me and My Gang (Lyric Street, 2006) After spending much of the 1990s playing with the alternative rock band Unclethumbtack, Picher’s Joe Don Rooney headed to Nashville and met his future Rascal Flatts band mates. Although the country-pop band had plenty of success prior to Me and My Gang, this five-time multiplatinum album made them the top-selling artists of 2006. The album showcased three number ones (“What Hurts the Most,” “Stand,” and “My Wish”) and a twangy version of Tom Cochrane’s “Life Is a Highway,” prominently featured in the 2006 Pixar animated film Cars. Red Dirt Rangers, Ranger Motel (Ranger, 2007) Meeting at the red-dirt mecca the Farm in Stillwater in the early 1980s, the Red Dirt Rangers are one of the oldest active groups associated with the genre. Produced by Steve Ripley at the Church Studio in Tulsa, Ranger Motel was their first album following a near-fatal helicopter crash in 2004. Mixing country and bluegrass with Woody Guthrie-inspired lyrics, this 2007 album shows the band returning to its Stillwater roots, with songs penned by red-dirt legends Jimmy LaFave, Bob Childers, Mike McClure, Tom Skinner, and Greg Jacobs. Restless Heart, Wheels (RCA, 1986) Formed in 1983 by two producers with state ties, Grove’s Tim DuBois and Clinton’s Scott Hendricks, Restless Heart also features three members from Oklahoma—Dave Innis of Bartlesville, Paul Gregg of Altus, and Greg Jennings of Nicoma Park. It’s no surprise, then, that the group was originally titled the Okie Project. Often compared to country-rock heavyweights the Eagles, Restless Heart charted four number ones with this, their sophomore album. Ricochet, Ricochet (Sony, 1996) Ricochet’s mix of up-tempo tunes and tight harmony ballads kept this certified gold album on the charts for more than a year and earned the band an ACM award for best new vocal group. Four songs charted from this 1996 debut, including a numberone hit (“Daddy’s Money”), a top-five song (“What Do I Know”), and a top ten (“Love Is Stronger Than Leon Russell, Hank Wilson’s Back! (Shelter, 1973) In the early 1970s, the rise of outlaw country by Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings and successful country-rock albums by Gram Parsons and Neil Young erased the country music stigma held by many hippies and rock fans of the day. Recording under the pseudonym Hank Wilson, Leon Russell helped to further that changing perception with this 1973 album, in which the Rock and Roll Hall of Famer puts his own spin on country classics like George Jones’ “She Thinks I Still Care” and Hank Thompson’s “A Six Pack to Go.” Blake Shelton, Pure BS (Warner Bros. nashville, 2007) While Blake Shelton had plenty of success with his three previous releases, he first appears truly comfortable in his own skin with this double-entendre album, Pure BS. There are good-time rockers (“This Can’t Be Good”) and a drinking song about sobriety (“The More I Drink”), but there are great ballads as well (“Don’t Make Me”). On a cover of Michael Bublé’s “Home” on the 2008 reissue, the Ada native sings about being away from a lover, while his future wife, OklahomaToday.com 91 Discography Miranda Lambert, provides the backing vocals. Jean Shepard, Songs of a Love Affair (Capitol, 1956) Jean Shepard and her family were living in poverty in Pauls Valley when they moved to Visalia, California, during World War II. Aided by adopted Oklahomans Hank Thompson (who discovered her) and guitarist Speedy West (who played on her early recordings), Shepard sang songs about women wronged that set the stage for future risktakers Loretta Lynn and Wanda Jackson. This 1956 debut was one of the first country music concept albums, featuring “Mysteries of Life” and “Did I Turn Down a Better Deal,” written by Tommy Collins. Sammi Smith, Help Me Make It Through the Night (Mega, 1970) Sammi Smith began singing as an eleven-year-old in the Oklahoma City club Someplace Else. More than a decade later, in 1967, she moved to Nashville and befriended a janitor at Columbia Records, Kris Kristofferson. Smith took Kristofferson’s song, “Help Me Make It Through the Night,” to number one in 1971, winning 92 September/October 2011 a Grammy in the process. Nicknamed “Girl Hero” by Waylon Jennings, Smith endeared audiences with her husky voice and unabashed take on risqué lyrics like those in her signature song. Hank Thompson, At the Golden Nugget (Capitol Nashville, 1961) Hank Thompson moved to Oklahoma City in 1952 and set off a series of firsts in country music: He was the first to record in high-fidelity stereo, started the first variety show color broadcast (on WKYTV), and was the first country act to play Las Vegas. Showcasing finger-picker Merle Travis (a one-time resident of the Lake Tenkiller area), this 1961 album recorded in Vegas was the first live album in country music. On a record that features Leon McAuliffe’s “Steel Guitar Rag” and Johnny Bond’s “I’ll Step Aside,” it’s songs like Thompson’s own “A Six Pack to Go” that shows why he’s been called “the poet laureate of beer drinkers.” “ One critic claims Jimmy LaFave stands out ‘like a pint of Guinness in a bar full of Miller Lites.’ ” (“Someone Else’s Star” and “Rebecca Lynn”), while two others (“Nothin’ Less Than Love” and “Going, Going, Gone”) became singles for the Buffalo Club and Neal McCoy. Thompson Square, Thompson Square (Stoney Creek, 2011) Keifer Thompson of Miami was raised on Roger Miller, Merle Haggard, and Bruce Springsteen. He moved to Nashville in 1996, where he met his future wife and band mate, Shawna, three days after arriving in town. After years of trogging through Nashville as solo artists, the duo’s debut album rocketed into the top five behind the number-one platinum-certified hit, “Are You Gonna Kiss Me or Not.” The Tractors, The Tractors (Arista nashville, 1994) Comprised of former backing musicians for Bob Dylan, Eric Clapton, Bonnie Raitt, Linda Ronstadt, and Leonard Cohen, the Tractors were a country music anomaly. Led by Steve Ripley of Glencoe, band members were Nashville outsiders who self-produced their debut album at Tulsa’s Church Studio. It features guest spots by Raitt, Leon Russell, JJ Cale, and others. Fueled by the single “Baby Likes to Rock It,” the debut became the highest-selling country album of the year and landed the group two Grammy nominations. Carrie Underwood, Some Hearts (Arista nashville, 2005) Carrie Underwood’s country-pop stylings and girl-next-door charm brought victory on the 2005 edition of American Idol. The Checotah native quickly made an indelible mark on country music with her debut album, Some Hearts, which sold more than seven million copies and was named Country Album of the Decade at the 2010 Billboard Music Awards. Six singles charted from this album, with three number ones: “Jesus, Take the Wheel,” “Before He Cheats,” and “Wasted.” Jimmy Wakely, Vintage Collections (Capitol, 1996) In 1940, the Jimmy Wakely Trio climbed onto a building during an Okemah parade in order to get Gene Autry’s attention. He met with the band members and told them to look him up if they ever came to California. They did and soon joined Autry’s Melody Ranch radio show before breaking off into solo careers. Wakely, a Rosedale native, would follow in his hero’s footprints, appearing on radio, television, western movies, even in his own comic book series. This collection includes the ballad “Song of the Sierras” and “One Has My Name (the Other Has My Heart),” which charted in the top ten on the pop and country charts. Bryan White, Bryan White (Elektra, 1994) Raised in a musical family, Bryan White grew up playing drums and singing in bands with his parents. After graduating from Putnam City West High School in 1992, the country-pop heartthrob left for Nashville and quickly became a songwriter for Glen Campbell Music. This 1994 debut landed the twenty-year-old Lawtonborn singer two number ones The Willis Brothers, 20 Great Truck Drivin’ Songs (Gusto, 2008) Raised outside Schulter, the Willis Brothers were originally known as the Oklahoma Wranglers and played on KGEF in Shawnee for most of the 1930s. After World War II, the brothers joined the Grand Ole Opry and performed on the first recordings of Hank Williams. They later changed their name to the Willis Brothers to appeal to fans beyond western music. This compilation features some of their best songs, including their 1964 top-ten hit “Give Me 40 Acres (To Turn This Rig Around)” and memorable song titles like “Soft Shoulders and Dangerous Curves” and “Diesel Drivin’ Donut Dunkin’ Dan.” top of the world during their time in Oklahoma, broadcasting on KVOO radio to national audiences from Cain’s Ballroom in Tulsa. This collection includes fourteen of the western swing kings’ best, including the official Oklahoma country and western song “Faded Love,” the band’s take on the traditional “Ida Red,” and one of their biggest hits, “Take Me Back to Tulsa,” which they sang in the 1940 film Take Me Back to Oklahoma. The 2009 Tiffany Transcriptions box set features nine additional discs of Bob’s hollerin’. Wilhelm scream film sound effect and for his role on the television show Rawhide. In music, he’s probably best known for his 1958 novelty hit, “Purple People Eater,” and his drunken country singer alter ego, Ben Colder. Yet as this companion album to the MGM film of the same name attests, the former rodeo rider from Erick was also a great cowboy singer. Trisha Yearwood, Jasper County (MCA Nashville, 2005) Three months before she married Garth Brooks, Georgia native Trisha Yearwood, who now lives with Brooks in Owasso, released Jasper County. The album marked the end of her four-year recording hiatus and peaked at number one on the country chart. Notable tracks include the top-fifteen hit Sheb Wooley, Tales of How “Georgia Rain” and “Try the West Was Won (MGM, Me” (with backing vocals 1963) from Tulsan Ronnie Dunn), Sheb Wooley did a little while the 2006 re-release bit of everything in entertain- included a top-thirty duet ment. As an actor, he is best with Brooks, “Love Will remembered as the voice of the Always Win.” Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys, The Tiffany Transcriptions, Vol. 2 (Rhino, 1986) Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys were on OklahomaToday.com 93