Dorsey Burnette - Golden Selection (Remastered) (2021)
BAND/ARTIST: Dorsey Burnette
- Title: Golden Selection (Remastered)
- Year Of Release: 2021
- Label: Master Tape Records
- Genre: Rockabilly, Country, Rock and Roll
- Quality: FLAC (tracks)
- Total Time: 1:18:19
- Total Size: 401 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Bertha Lou (Remastered)
02. Let's Fall in Love (Remastered)
03. Til the Law Says Stop (Remastered)
04. Hey Little One (Remastered)
05. At a Distance (Remastered)
06. (There Was A) Tall Oak Tree (Remastered)
07. Great Shakin' Fever (Remastered)
08. Midnight Train (Remastered)
09. The Devil's Queen (Remastered)
10. Jungle Magic (Remastered)
11. Try (Remastered)
12. Misery (Remastered)
13. Lonely Train (Remastered)
14. Juarez Town (Remastered)
15. Big Rock Candy Mountain (Remastered)
16. Your Love (Remastered)
17. Way in the Middle of the Night (Remastered)
18. The Ghost of Billy Malloo (Remastered)
19. Lucy Darlin' (Remastered)
20. Black Roses (Remastered)
21. The River and the Mountain (Remastered)
22. This Hotel (Remastered)
23. Hard Rock Mine (Remastered)
24. That's Me Without You (Remastered)
25. Rainin' (Remastered)
26. A Full House (Remastered)
27. Circle Rock (Remastered)
28. House with a Tin Roof (Remastered)
29. Feminine Touch (Remastered)
30. Dying Ember (Remastered)
31. Rolling Restless Stones (Remastered)
32. Back to Nature (Remastered)
33. The Boys Kept Hangin' Around (Remastered)
34. I'm a Waitin' for Ya Baby (Remastered)
01. Bertha Lou (Remastered)
02. Let's Fall in Love (Remastered)
03. Til the Law Says Stop (Remastered)
04. Hey Little One (Remastered)
05. At a Distance (Remastered)
06. (There Was A) Tall Oak Tree (Remastered)
07. Great Shakin' Fever (Remastered)
08. Midnight Train (Remastered)
09. The Devil's Queen (Remastered)
10. Jungle Magic (Remastered)
11. Try (Remastered)
12. Misery (Remastered)
13. Lonely Train (Remastered)
14. Juarez Town (Remastered)
15. Big Rock Candy Mountain (Remastered)
16. Your Love (Remastered)
17. Way in the Middle of the Night (Remastered)
18. The Ghost of Billy Malloo (Remastered)
19. Lucy Darlin' (Remastered)
20. Black Roses (Remastered)
21. The River and the Mountain (Remastered)
22. This Hotel (Remastered)
23. Hard Rock Mine (Remastered)
24. That's Me Without You (Remastered)
25. Rainin' (Remastered)
26. A Full House (Remastered)
27. Circle Rock (Remastered)
28. House with a Tin Roof (Remastered)
29. Feminine Touch (Remastered)
30. Dying Ember (Remastered)
31. Rolling Restless Stones (Remastered)
32. Back to Nature (Remastered)
33. The Boys Kept Hangin' Around (Remastered)
34. I'm a Waitin' for Ya Baby (Remastered)
Dorsey Burnette is best remembered today as the brother of Johnny Burnette and a member of the Johnny Burnette Trio, and as the father of Billy Burnette. He had a solo career of his own, however, during the early '60s, and also wrote over 350 songs covered by the likes of Rick Nelson, Jerry Lee Lewis, Waylon Jennings, Glen Campbell, and Stevie Wonder, among many others.
Dorsey Burnette was born on December 28, 1932, in Memphis, the older of two sons of Dorsey Sr. and Willy May Burnette. He got his first guitar, a Gene Autry model, from his father at age six, at the same time that his father gave four-year-old Johnny a similar instrument -- the two immediately smashed them. His father eventually convinced the pair that if they learned to play guitar, they could be like the players on the Grand Ole Opry. Dorsey was a tough kid with a violent temper and not a lot of smarts holding it in check, and he was constantly in trouble in school and spending time with the wrong crowd. By the time he was a young teenager, Dorsey was hanging out at the Poplar Street Mission with future recording artist Lee Denson, when he wasn't getting arrested for truancy or fighting. He competed in the Golden Gloves as an aspiring boxer, and it was at the 1949 championship that he met Paul Burlison, another aspiring fighter. They made note of their shared interest in music, but Burlison's induction into the Army in 1951 prevented him from hooking up just then with Dorsey and Johnny, who had begun playing together in the late '40s. They were good enough to get sponsored by a local appliance store on one of the Memphis radio stations, doing country music, and they played gigs throughout the Memphis area, principally for beer money, fun, and girls -- he and his confederates worked hard and played hard, and music and the possibility of success that it offered probably kept Dorsey out of jail.
Dorsey Burnette was born on December 28, 1932, in Memphis, the older of two sons of Dorsey Sr. and Willy May Burnette. He got his first guitar, a Gene Autry model, from his father at age six, at the same time that his father gave four-year-old Johnny a similar instrument -- the two immediately smashed them. His father eventually convinced the pair that if they learned to play guitar, they could be like the players on the Grand Ole Opry. Dorsey was a tough kid with a violent temper and not a lot of smarts holding it in check, and he was constantly in trouble in school and spending time with the wrong crowd. By the time he was a young teenager, Dorsey was hanging out at the Poplar Street Mission with future recording artist Lee Denson, when he wasn't getting arrested for truancy or fighting. He competed in the Golden Gloves as an aspiring boxer, and it was at the 1949 championship that he met Paul Burlison, another aspiring fighter. They made note of their shared interest in music, but Burlison's induction into the Army in 1951 prevented him from hooking up just then with Dorsey and Johnny, who had begun playing together in the late '40s. They were good enough to get sponsored by a local appliance store on one of the Memphis radio stations, doing country music, and they played gigs throughout the Memphis area, principally for beer money, fun, and girls -- he and his confederates worked hard and played hard, and music and the possibility of success that it offered probably kept Dorsey out of jail.
Year 2021 | Country | Pop | Oldies | Rock | FLAC / APE
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