Terry Stafford - Has Anybody Seen My Sweet Gypsy Rose (1973)
BAND/ARTIST: Terry Stafford, Cledus T. Judd, The Tony Brook Band, Sonya Isaacs, Austins Bridge
- Title: Has Anybody Seen My Sweet Gypsy Rose
- Year Of Release: 1973
- Label: eOne Music
- Genre: Country
- Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
- Total Time: 00:35:19
- Total Size: 215 mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
01. Country Canary
02. Big In Vegas
03. Suspicion
04. Ain't No Woman Like My Woman
05. Shelly's Winter Love
06. Amarillo By Morning
07. Say Has Anybody Seen My Sweet Gypsy Rose
08. Let's Keep The Memories Warm
09. Captured
10. Easy To Say, Hard To Do
11. Road House Country Singer
12. It Sure Is Bad To Lover Her
There were two distinctive phases in Terry Stafford's meteoric decade-long recording career. The first segment was catalyzed by his one dynamite hit single, a 1964 cover of Elvis Presley's "Suspicion." Stafford's early recordings were mostly punctuated by squinky outbursts from a Farfisa or Vox electronic organ. "Suspicion" was a formulaic marvel of great precision, second only to the Elvis original and a spoof version by the Bonzo Dog Band. Stafford's brief second and final period is represented by the album Say, Has Anybody Seen My Sweet Gypsy Rose. Recorded for Atlantic in 1973 and reissued on CD by Koch in 2007, this country-pop production album brought him some measure of success but not enough to sustain his flagging career, for after 1974 Stafford appears to have stopped making records altogether. In addition to the title track and "Amarillo by Morning," points of interest are "Big in Vegas" (co-written with Buck Owens), "Shelley's Winter Love" by Merle Haggard, and a countrified third-generation cover of "Suspicion."
01. Country Canary
02. Big In Vegas
03. Suspicion
04. Ain't No Woman Like My Woman
05. Shelly's Winter Love
06. Amarillo By Morning
07. Say Has Anybody Seen My Sweet Gypsy Rose
08. Let's Keep The Memories Warm
09. Captured
10. Easy To Say, Hard To Do
11. Road House Country Singer
12. It Sure Is Bad To Lover Her
There were two distinctive phases in Terry Stafford's meteoric decade-long recording career. The first segment was catalyzed by his one dynamite hit single, a 1964 cover of Elvis Presley's "Suspicion." Stafford's early recordings were mostly punctuated by squinky outbursts from a Farfisa or Vox electronic organ. "Suspicion" was a formulaic marvel of great precision, second only to the Elvis original and a spoof version by the Bonzo Dog Band. Stafford's brief second and final period is represented by the album Say, Has Anybody Seen My Sweet Gypsy Rose. Recorded for Atlantic in 1973 and reissued on CD by Koch in 2007, this country-pop production album brought him some measure of success but not enough to sustain his flagging career, for after 1974 Stafford appears to have stopped making records altogether. In addition to the title track and "Amarillo by Morning," points of interest are "Big in Vegas" (co-written with Buck Owens), "Shelley's Winter Love" by Merle Haggard, and a countrified third-generation cover of "Suspicion."
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