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Jim Reeves - Billy Bayou (Remastered) (2025) [Hi-Res]

Jim Reeves - Billy Bayou (Remastered) (2025) [Hi-Res]

BAND/ARTIST: Jim Reeves

  • Title: Billy Bayou (Remastered)
  • Year Of Release: 2025
  • Label: ZOROTY
  • Genre: Country
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks) [44.1kHz/24bit]
  • Total Time: 1:02:12
  • Total Size: 578 / 305 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Blue Boy (Remastered)
02. Theme of Love (Remastered)
03. Billy Bayou (Remastered)
04. I'd Like to Be (Remastered)
05. Home (Remastered)
06. If Heartache Is the Fashion (Remastered)
07. Partners (Remastered)
08. I'M Beginning to Forget You (Remastered)
09. He'll Have to Go (Remastered)
10. In a Mansion Stands My Love (Remastered)
11. I'm Gettin' Better (Remastered)
12. I Know One (Remastered)
13. I Missed Me (Remastered)
14. Am I Losing You (Remastered)
15. Whispering Hope (Remastered)
16. The Blizzard (Remastered)
17. Danny Boy (Remastered)
18. Stand at Your Window (Remastered)
19. Losing Your Love (Remastered)
20. (How Can I Write on Paper) What I Feel in My Heart (Remastered)
21. A Letter to My Heart (Remastered)
22. Adios Amigo (Remastered)
23. I'm Gonna Change Everything (Remastered)
24. Pride Goes Before a Fall (Remastered)
25. You're the Only Good Thing (That's Happened to Me) (Remastered)
26. Oh, How I Miss You Tonight (Remastered)

Gentleman Jim Reeves was perhaps the biggest male star to emerge from the Nashville sound. His mellow baritone voice and muted velvet orchestration combined to create a sound that echoed around his world and lasted for decades to follow. Reeves was capable of singing hard country ("Mexican Joe" went to number one in 1953), but he made his greatest impact as a country-pop crooner. From 1955 through 1969, Reeves was consistently on the country and pop charts -- a remarkable fact in light of his untimely death in an airplane accident in 1964. Not only was he a presence on the American charts, but he became country music's foremost international ambassador and, if anything, was even more popular in Europe and Britain than in his native U.S. Several of his posthumous hits actually outsold his earlier singles; no less than six number one singles arrived in the three years following his burial. In fact, during the '70s and '80s, he continued to have hits with both unreleased material and electronic duets like "Take Me in Your Arms and Hold Me" with Deborah Allen and "Have You Ever Been Lonely?" with his smooth-singing female counterpart of the Nashville sound, Patsy Cline, who also perished in an airplane crash, in 1963. But Reeves' legacy remains with lush country-pop singles like "Four Walls" (1957) and "He'll Have to Go" (1959), which defined both his style and an entire era of country music.



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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 22:25
    • Like
    • 0
Many thanks for Hi-Res.