
Bob Wills - Here's That Man Again (Expanded Edition) (1968)
BAND/ARTIST: Bob Wills
- Title: Here's That Man Again (Expanded Edition)
- Year Of Release: 1968
- Label: Geffen
- Genre: Country, Western Swing
- Quality: FLAC 16/44100
- Total Time: 00:31:26
- Total Size: 206 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Later work from Bob Wills -- looking mighty proud on the cover, with a stogie between his teeth!
PRODUCED BY PAUL COHEN / ARRANGED BY CLIFF PARMAN
Inside this album cover is a recording that’s a genuine goose-bump, chill-up-the-arm classic starring the guy who put Western in Country and Western Music... Bob Wills, “That Man” who's back again, the fellow who wrote “San Antonio Rose” and a passel of other Western Swing gems.
The sounds you'll hear as this masterpiece of an album unwinds on the turntable are as Country as the “Wabash Cannonball”. They are also as hip as “The Girl From Ipanema”... and as Western as “Tumblin’ Tumbleweeds”. And darned if some of the sounds aren’t as uptown modern-pop as “Music To Watch Girls By”. Every selection bears the brand of “That Man”, BOB WILLS.
I was there in that canyon sized studio when it all happened. I watched Wills in his sport shirt, slacks and ever present white stetson as he fiddled, sang, conducted and “Ahhh haa’d” his way through the grueling recording session which spawned this album.
Who ever heard of using bold and brassy Stan Kenton sounding horn arrangements in the same groove with a steel guitar and a brace of fiddles? Take “Riders In The Sky” — Those horns riding herd on three galloping sagebrush-tuned guitars, sliding steel and five Western-Cajun fiddles to rawhide those ghostly cowboys across the draw.
Adios rule book!
The Wills trademark is subtly present in the beautiful pop-ish ballad, “Born To Love You” vocalized by Tag Lambert, long time singer with Wills.
Tag tears up the upbeat Western swinger “Way Down In Texas” and sounds so much like the late Western Swing crooning king Tommy Duncan that it’s scary.
Most music pros would have said “forget it” to the idea of coupling the knocked out novelty “Fiddle Bird” (a product of Bob’s amplified, cajun-coined fiddle styling) and “Canadian Sunset” with all its moody beauty — however, when you’re caught up in the listening you'll truly appreciate these musical choices again and again.
And, oh yeah! I’m still not believing that nifty yodel thing by Bob’s gifted thrush Ramona Reed. I’m not ready for those up-East horns blaring, but blending with Ramona’s yodeling on “Betcha My Heart”.
Listed below are those 18 Music City studio musicians responsible for giving the Oklahoma cowboy Bob Wills some solid rosin-and-bow support in a grand manner. Included is WLAC Radio’s early morning Country deejay Bob Jennings who kicks the whole thing off with his exciting introduction, “Here’s That Man Again!”... “And here’s That Band Again”.
Album Liner Notes by
CHARLIE LAMB CORPORATION
Charlie Lamb — Roger Schutt
MUSICIANS ON THE BOB WILLS SESSIONS
Harold Bradley — Guitar
Bob Moore — Bass
Buddy Harmon — Drums
Pig Robbins — Piano
Billy Sanford — Banjo
Fred Carter — Guitar
Lloyd Green — Steel Guitar
Tommy Jackson — Fiddle
Gorden Terry — Fiddle
Buddy Spicher — Fiddle
Tommy Vaden — Fiddle
Shorty Lavender — Fiddle
Don Tweedy — Sax
Rufus Long — Sax
Quitman Dennis — Sax
Wayne Butler — Trombone
George Tidwell — Trumpet
Bob Phillips — Trumpet
Tracklist:
1-1 Bob Wills - Here's That Man Again [2:21]
1-2 Bob Wills - Riders In The Sky [2:13]
1-3 Bob Wills - Born To Love You [2:21]
1-4 Bob Wills - Big Taters In The Sandy Land [2:11]
1-5 Bob Wills - Betcha My Heart [2:17]
1-6 Bob Wills - Lily Dale [2:49]
1-7 Bob Wills - Cimarron [2:17]
1-8 Bob Wills - Canadian Sunset [2:39]
1-9 Bob Wills - Way Down In Texas [2:31]
1-10 Bob Wills - Don't Send Him Back To Me [2:46]
1-11 Bob Wills - Fiddle Bird [2:15]
1-12 Bob Wills - Rain Drops In The River [2:38]
1-13 Bob Wills - Carolina In The Morning [2:08]
PRODUCED BY PAUL COHEN / ARRANGED BY CLIFF PARMAN
Inside this album cover is a recording that’s a genuine goose-bump, chill-up-the-arm classic starring the guy who put Western in Country and Western Music... Bob Wills, “That Man” who's back again, the fellow who wrote “San Antonio Rose” and a passel of other Western Swing gems.
The sounds you'll hear as this masterpiece of an album unwinds on the turntable are as Country as the “Wabash Cannonball”. They are also as hip as “The Girl From Ipanema”... and as Western as “Tumblin’ Tumbleweeds”. And darned if some of the sounds aren’t as uptown modern-pop as “Music To Watch Girls By”. Every selection bears the brand of “That Man”, BOB WILLS.
I was there in that canyon sized studio when it all happened. I watched Wills in his sport shirt, slacks and ever present white stetson as he fiddled, sang, conducted and “Ahhh haa’d” his way through the grueling recording session which spawned this album.
Who ever heard of using bold and brassy Stan Kenton sounding horn arrangements in the same groove with a steel guitar and a brace of fiddles? Take “Riders In The Sky” — Those horns riding herd on three galloping sagebrush-tuned guitars, sliding steel and five Western-Cajun fiddles to rawhide those ghostly cowboys across the draw.
Adios rule book!
The Wills trademark is subtly present in the beautiful pop-ish ballad, “Born To Love You” vocalized by Tag Lambert, long time singer with Wills.
Tag tears up the upbeat Western swinger “Way Down In Texas” and sounds so much like the late Western Swing crooning king Tommy Duncan that it’s scary.
Most music pros would have said “forget it” to the idea of coupling the knocked out novelty “Fiddle Bird” (a product of Bob’s amplified, cajun-coined fiddle styling) and “Canadian Sunset” with all its moody beauty — however, when you’re caught up in the listening you'll truly appreciate these musical choices again and again.
And, oh yeah! I’m still not believing that nifty yodel thing by Bob’s gifted thrush Ramona Reed. I’m not ready for those up-East horns blaring, but blending with Ramona’s yodeling on “Betcha My Heart”.
Listed below are those 18 Music City studio musicians responsible for giving the Oklahoma cowboy Bob Wills some solid rosin-and-bow support in a grand manner. Included is WLAC Radio’s early morning Country deejay Bob Jennings who kicks the whole thing off with his exciting introduction, “Here’s That Man Again!”... “And here’s That Band Again”.
Album Liner Notes by
CHARLIE LAMB CORPORATION
Charlie Lamb — Roger Schutt
MUSICIANS ON THE BOB WILLS SESSIONS
Harold Bradley — Guitar
Bob Moore — Bass
Buddy Harmon — Drums
Pig Robbins — Piano
Billy Sanford — Banjo
Fred Carter — Guitar
Lloyd Green — Steel Guitar
Tommy Jackson — Fiddle
Gorden Terry — Fiddle
Buddy Spicher — Fiddle
Tommy Vaden — Fiddle
Shorty Lavender — Fiddle
Don Tweedy — Sax
Rufus Long — Sax
Quitman Dennis — Sax
Wayne Butler — Trombone
George Tidwell — Trumpet
Bob Phillips — Trumpet
Tracklist:
1-1 Bob Wills - Here's That Man Again [2:21]
1-2 Bob Wills - Riders In The Sky [2:13]
1-3 Bob Wills - Born To Love You [2:21]
1-4 Bob Wills - Big Taters In The Sandy Land [2:11]
1-5 Bob Wills - Betcha My Heart [2:17]
1-6 Bob Wills - Lily Dale [2:49]
1-7 Bob Wills - Cimarron [2:17]
1-8 Bob Wills - Canadian Sunset [2:39]
1-9 Bob Wills - Way Down In Texas [2:31]
1-10 Bob Wills - Don't Send Him Back To Me [2:46]
1-11 Bob Wills - Fiddle Bird [2:15]
1-12 Bob Wills - Rain Drops In The River [2:38]
1-13 Bob Wills - Carolina In The Morning [2:08]
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