<< MP3 Buck Owens - 10 CD's 1973 - 1975
Buck Owens - 10 CD's 1973 - 1975
Category Sound
FormatMP3
SourceCD
Bitrate320kbit
GenreCountry
TypeAlbum
Date 1 decade, 1 year
Size 763.93 MB
 
Website http://www.allmusic.com/artist/buck-owens-mn0000941579/biography
 
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Buck Owens - 10 CD's  1973 - 1975



At the beginning of 1971, Owens signed what would turn out to be his last contract with Capitol. He would record for the label for another four years and after his contract expired, he would gain ownership of all of his Capitol recordings, from 1957 to 1975; Capitol could continue to manufacture Owens records until 1980, when the masters would all return to Buck. Throughout 1971, he continued to have Top Ten hits, including a version of Simon & Garfunkel's "Bridge Over Troubled Water," "Ruby (Are You Mad)," and "Rollin' in My Sweet Baby's Arms." In 1971, CBS canceled Hee Haw, and the show moved into syndication, where it became even more popular. By 1973, it had been so successful that it forced Buck Owens' Ranch off the air, simply because Owens' first program couldn't compete with the high ratings of his second show. In the spring of 1972, he had his final number one single as a solo artist, the ballad "Made in Japan." However, his career began to slide after that. It took him over a year to reach the Top Ten again with "Big Game Hunter" at the end of 1973. Two other Top Ten hits followed in the spring and summer of 1974, though both songs -- a rewrite of Dr. Hook's "On the Cover of the Rolling Stone" called "On the Cover of the Music City News" and "(It's A) Monsters' Holiday" -- were novelty numbers.

In July of 1974, Rich, Owens' longtime partner and guitarist, died in a motorcycle crash, which sent Buck into a deep depression. Though he had one more Top Ten hit that fall with "Great Expectations," he had trouble breaking the Top 40 in the years following Rich's death. Owens' contract with Capitol expired in 1975, and he moved to Warner Brothers, where he began recording in Nashville. Appropriately, his music began to sound more like country-pop than the hard-edged Bakersfield sound he had become famous for, but that's because he relinquished creative control of his records to the producers. Owens' record sales had significantly declined, but Hee Haw remained popular. Ironically, its success had an unwanted side effect -- for many listeners in the general audience, Owens became the cornball country comedian he was in the show, not the hardcore honky tonker he was at heart. That perception remained throughout the end of the '70s and even a hit duet with Emmylou Harris, "Play Together Again Again," in 1979 couldn't erase it. In 1980, Owens decided he didn't want to continue with the grind of constant performing and recording. He ended his contract with Warner and drastically cut back his performances. Even though he was semi-retired, he continued to tape Hee Haw until 1986.






De volgende CD's zijn geposts,

1 - Buck Owens - 1973 - Arms Full Of Empty
2 - Buck Owens - 1973 - In The Palm Of Your Hand
3 - Buck Owens - 1973 - The Good Old Days
4 - Buck Owens - 1974 - It's a Monster's Holiday
5 - Buck Owens - 1974 - Live At The Sydney Opera House
6 - Buck Owens - 1974 - Live In Japan
7 - Buck Owens - 1974 - Live In New Zealand
8 - Buck Owens - 1975 - 41St Street Lonely Heart's Club
9 - Buck Owens - 1975 - If You Aint Lovin
10 - Buck Owens - 1975 - Live At The John Ascugas Nugget









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