Sammy Walker - Blue Ridge Mountain Skyline (1977)
BAND/ARTIST: Sammy Walker
- Title: Blue Ridge Mountain Skyline
- Year Of Release: 1977/2009
- Label: Rhino, Warner Records
- Genre: Folk, Country, Singer-Songwriter
- Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
- Total Time: 40:56
- Total Size: 101/265 Mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Blue Ridge Mountain Skyline (Album Version) 5:27
02. Appalachian Coal Miner's Son (Album Version) 4:38
03. Legends (Album Version) 3:33
04. Will You Miss Me When I'm Gone (Album Version) 3:21
05. Carolina Soldier Boy (Album Version) 4:24
06. Hollywood Sue (Album Version) 3:48
07. Waitin' for a Train (Album Version) 3:25
08. Dust Storm Disaster (Album Version) 5:05
09. Ballad of the Late Edgar (Album Version) 3:36
10. Tight Rope to Heaven (Album Version) 3:39
01. Blue Ridge Mountain Skyline (Album Version) 5:27
02. Appalachian Coal Miner's Son (Album Version) 4:38
03. Legends (Album Version) 3:33
04. Will You Miss Me When I'm Gone (Album Version) 3:21
05. Carolina Soldier Boy (Album Version) 4:24
06. Hollywood Sue (Album Version) 3:48
07. Waitin' for a Train (Album Version) 3:25
08. Dust Storm Disaster (Album Version) 5:05
09. Ballad of the Late Edgar (Album Version) 3:36
10. Tight Rope to Heaven (Album Version) 3:39
Sammy Walker (born July 7, 1952 near Atlanta, Georgia) is an American singer-songwriter. Influenced by the folk and country sounds of Bob Dylan, Woody Guthrie and Hank Williams, Walker emerged in the mid-1970s with two albums for the Folkways label and two albums for Warner Brothers. While appearing on Bob Fass's radio show in 1975, he caught the ear of Phil Ochs, who was impressed by the young songwriter and agreed to produce his first album with Folkways. Walker recorded two albums for Warner Brothers under the tutelage of producer Nick Venet, and toured Europe in 1978 and again in 1986. After recording an album of Woody Guthrie songs in 1979, he did not record again until 1989.
Walker, who at least once downplayed his own success by claiming he has "only 50 fans, one in each state", performed an opening set for Ochs at Gerde's Folk City on October 19, 1975, when Ochs drunkenly staged what Ochs billed as the final Phil Ochs concert, and the first John Train performance. Midnight was when Ochs was supposedly changing his stage name to Train, but his inebriated behavior incurred the wrath of the Gerde's staff to the point where the waitress was no longer serving Ochs, amid the soon-to-be-suicidal folksinger's rambling tirades against, among other musings, "Johnny Cash, BEFORE amphetamines". Having finished his set including his signature tune "Closing Time", Walker watched Ochs with apparent embarrassment from the wings. Roger McGuinn was also on the bill for this concert.
Walker, who at least once downplayed his own success by claiming he has "only 50 fans, one in each state", performed an opening set for Ochs at Gerde's Folk City on October 19, 1975, when Ochs drunkenly staged what Ochs billed as the final Phil Ochs concert, and the first John Train performance. Midnight was when Ochs was supposedly changing his stage name to Train, but his inebriated behavior incurred the wrath of the Gerde's staff to the point where the waitress was no longer serving Ochs, amid the soon-to-be-suicidal folksinger's rambling tirades against, among other musings, "Johnny Cash, BEFORE amphetamines". Having finished his set including his signature tune "Closing Time", Walker watched Ochs with apparent embarrassment from the wings. Roger McGuinn was also on the bill for this concert.
Country | Folk | FLAC / APE | Mp3
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