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Connie Francis & Hank Williams, Jr. - Sing Great Country Favorites (Expanded Edition) (1964) [Country]; FLAC (tracks)

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Connie Francis & Hank Williams, Jr. - Sing Great Country Favorites (Expanded Edition) (1964) [Country]; FLAC (tracks)

Unread postby CountryBlues » 20 Mar 2020, 13:46


Artist: Connie Francis & Hank Williams, Jr.
Album: Sing Great Country Favorites (Expanded Edition)
Genre: Country
Label: Polydor
Released: 1964/2020
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Tracklist:
  1. Send Me The Pillow That You Dream On
  2. Wolverton Mountain
  3. Please Help Me I'm Falling
  4. Singing The Blues
  5. Walk On By
  6. If You've Got The Money, I've Got The Time
  7. Mule Skinner Blues
  8. Making Believe
  9. Blue, Blue Day
  10. No Letter Today
  11. Bye, Bye Love
  12. Wabash Cannonball
  13. Mule Skinner Blues (Alternate Take)
  14. No Letter Today (Alternate Take)

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The pairing of Hank Williams, Jr. and Connie Francis seems like a coming together of equals now that Williams has become a big star, but at the time the duo recorded Sing Great Country Favorites, Williams was a 15-year-old boy at the beginning of his recording career and Francis was a very well-established artist. Francis, ten years Williams' senior, was given the task of gazing adoringly at Williams for the photo session, which must have been an awkward shoot. Thankfully, the age disparity isn't reflected in the music, as Williams' mature-sounding vocals take the lead and Francis sings mostly harmonies. The songs are a collection of country standards and recent hits such as "Wolverton Mountain," "Walk on By," and "Send Me the Pillow That You Dream On." A few, including "Bye Bye Love" and "Singing the Blues," are new recordings of songs that Francis had already tackled as a solo vocalist a few years earlier. MGM's goal in pairing the two singers may have been to prop up Francis' career and to boost Williams', but the effort was unsuccessful from a commercial standpoint. In retrospect, the album seems even more unusual than it did at the time, since Williams transformed into the wild Bocephus and Francis is sometimes described as the female Pat Boone. The Bear Family reissue appends two alternate takes, including a more spirited rendition of "Mule Skinner Blues" that rivals the album take.

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