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Tennessee Ernie Ford - The Remasters (All Tracks Remastered) (2021)

Tennessee Ernie Ford - The Remasters (All Tracks Remastered) (2021)
  • Title: The Remasters (All Tracks Remastered)
  • Year Of Release: 2021
  • Label: Millennium Digital Remaster
  • Genre: Country, Pop
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
  • Total Time: 1:08:54
  • Total Size: 423 / 160 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Jealous Heart (Remastered 2020)
02. Stonewall Jackson's Way (Remastered 2020)
03. I Can't Help It (If I'm Still in Love with You) (Remastered 2020)
04. Maryland, My Maryland (Remastered 2020)
05. Molly Darling (Remastered 2020)
06. I Can Whip the Scoundrel (Remastered 2020)
07. Twenty-One Years (Remastered 2020)
08. The Rebel Soldier (Remastered 2020)
09. Look Down (Remastered 2020)
10. The Southern Wagon (Remastered 2020)
11. The Night Herding Song (Remastered 2020)
12. Dixie (Remastered 2020)
13. Old Blue (Remastered 2020)
14. The Army of the Free (Remastered 2020)
15. Brown's Ferry Blues (Remastered 2020)
16. Virginia's Bloody Soil (Remastered 2020)
17. Gaily the Troubadour (Remastered 2018)
18. The Fall Of Charleston (Remastered 2020)
19. In the Pines (Remastered 2018)
20. The New York Volunteers (Remastered 2020)
21. Who Will Shoe Your Pretty Little Foot (Remastered 2018)
22. Marching Through Georgia (Remastered 2020)
23. Trouble in Mind (Remastered 2018)
24. John Henry (Remastered 2018)
25. Union Dixie (Remastered 2020)

The booming baritone voice of Tennessee Ernie Ford was best known for his 1955 cover of Merle Travis' grim coal-mining song "Sixteen Tons," watered down by the dulcet strains of a Hollywood studio orchestra but retaining its innate seriousness thanks to the sheer power of Ford's singing. But there was more to Tennessee Ernie Ford than that. Over his long career, Ford sang everything from proto-rock & roll to gospel, recorded over 100 albums, and earned numerous honors and awards, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian award. His popularity and recognition transcended country music, and he was among the earliest and most successful "crossover" artists to come out of country music, paving the way for such diverse popular culture figures as Johnny Cash, Dolly Parton, Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings, Reba McEntire, and many more.

Born Ernest Jennings Ford in 1919, he was a native of Bristol, TN, a town that subsequently came to be regarded -- thanks to the Ralph Peer field recording sessions (featuring Jimmie Rodgers and the Carter Family) conducted there in 1927 -- as one of the birthplaces of modern country music. He started singing as a boy and, after graduating from high school, became a voice student at Virginia Intermount College. The latter was officially a women's college but admitted a limited number of male students to its daytime study program, and it was with the help of one of his teachers and her husband that Ford, with his deep and resonant voice, broke into radio, as an announcer on WOPI in northeast Tennessee. By 1939, he'd moved to Cincinnati, OH, and was studying at that city's Conservatory of Music. He moved around the country in the year leading up to America's entry into World War II, holding announcer jobs in Atlanta, Georgia, and Knoxville, TN. Following America's entry into World War II with the attack on Pearl Harbor, Ford enlisted in the United States Army in early 1942 and was assigned to the U.S. Army Air Corps, which kept him stateside, serving in Alabama and later in California, where he was posted to a bomberdier school. His talent wasn't dormant during this period, and he was able to participate in various special services entertainment programs.



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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 02:58
    • Like
    • 0
Many thanks for lossless.