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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A very strong compilation,
By
This review is from: Essential Charley Pride (Audio CD)
Please note that this is a re-issue of the earlier Anthology double CD with an identical track listing but different packaging.
It is not possible to do full justice to Charley's career in forty tracks but this anthology is easily the best compilation of his music yet released in America. Whether it is better than the Australian compilation Legendary (released in Britain with different packaging titled Legends) is a good debating point. Certainly, this compilation has superior sound quality but there are significant differences in track selection that mean but all true Charley Pride fans will want both despite substantial duplication - thirty songs appear on both sets. As befits an American compilation, this set focuses on the songs that established and maintained his career in his homeland from the mid-sixties to the mid-eighties, featuring many of his high-charting hits on the country charts. There were far more than forty of these so inevitably some have been left out but most of the songs that Americans regard as essential are here including Kiss an angel good morning and Is anybody going to San Antone. Charley's popularity in America was at its height between 1969 and 1973, represented here by All I have to offer you is me and the subsequent tracks on the first CD. As the years went boy, Charley's popularity at home gradually slipped although he continued to have plenty of big country hits well into the eighties. The second CD includes twenty of these later tracks. Meanwhile, Charley toured extensively abroad, performing in Britain, Australia and other countries where he found a ready market for his brand of traditional country music. Outside America Crystal chandeliers, never released as a single in America, became his signature song. As this is an American compilation, you won't find Crystal chandeliers here but you can find on the Legendary/Legends compilation I mentioned earlier, together with other tracks that are also omitted from this set (some of which were big American country hits) including Burgers and fries, You're my Jamaica, Snakes crawl at night, A whole lotta things to sing about, Mountain of love, Missing you, Does my ring hurt your finger and My eyes can only see as far as you. Among the ten songs here but not on the other collection are Before I met you, Did you think to pray, Don't fight the feelings of love and We could. If you don't want the duplication involved in buying both collections and aren't worried about the differences in track selection, go for this one for the re-mastered sound quality and superior packaging. If song selection is to be the criteria (remembering the sound quality on the other set is perfectly good enough for most people), my guess is that Americans will prefer this set while Brits and Aussies (who regard Crystal chandeliers as essential) will choose the other collection.
12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
This has the same lineup as 2003's Anthology but costs $10 more!!!,
By
This review is from: Essential Charley Pride (Audio CD)
Charley Pride - country music's lone black superstar - ranks behind only Elvis Presley in all-time sales figures for RCA artists. Yet his deep RCA catalog has never been properly exploited. The forty-track remastered Anthology - the first multi-disc Pride retrospective available domestically in stores -was a step in the right direction. Now, just three years later, Sony/BMG has lazily just reissued that collection under a new name and upped the price by $10!
Pride created his own vocal style by melding the smooth delivery of Jim Reeves with a natural twang that recalled Lefty Frizzell and Ernest Tubb. The early singles (1966-68) that lead off disc one, like "Just Between You And Me" and "The Easy Part's Over," are all ballads sung in a lower key. With the 1969 live recording of Hank Williams' "Kaw-Liga," Pride added an uptempo hit to his repertoire that finally captured his warm baritone in its natural register (which he used on all recordings thereafter). "Kaw-Liga's" follow-up, the ballad "All I Have To Offer You (Is Me)" gave Pride the first of twenty-nine number one country hits at RCA. Aside from a gospel number "Did You Think To Pray," the tracks that make up the rest of disc one - covering 1970 through 1973 - also hit number one and are among Pride's most enduring recordings, including the uptempo "Wonder Could I Live There Anymore," "Is Anybody Going To San Antone" and his signature tune "Kiss An Angel Good Mornin'," as well as his common man odes "I'm Just Me" and "All His Children." Disc two is dominated by relationship tunes - mostly ballads - such as "Then Who Am I" and "She's Just An Old Love Turned Memory." This disc also denotes a change in producers (from Jack Clement to Jerry Bradley). While not reflected in their first collaboration - 1974's seemingly biographical "Mississippi Cotton Pickin' Delta Town" - Bradley's production approach eventually altered Pride's sound dramatically. Adding layers of strings and supersweet background vocals that created a lushness more typical of Ronnie Milsap (particularly on "More To Me" and "When I Stop Leaving"), Pride's voice - which had grown more expressive over the years - is often rendered indistinctive on these mid-70s through mid-80s singles. While most of Pride's hits are here, Anthology and this set omit some key tracks: his first single "Snakes Crawl At Night," his last big RCA hit "Every Heart Should Have One," the haunting "Missin' You," and the nostalgic "Burgers And Fries," among others. It's too bad that Sony/BMG didn't include the ten additional tracks that it easily had room for in order to get this overview absolutely right (instead of just releasing the same tracks again). Incidentally, there is a fifty-track Pride collection (Legendary) that is available as an import from RCA-Australia.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Nice Collection from Country Charley Pride,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Essential Charley Pride (Audio CD)
I will echo the sentiments of several of the other reviewers here, some of Charley Pride's biggest songs like Burgers and Fries and Snakes Crawl at Night are not on this collection. What makes these manufacturers think they have to stop at 20 tracks on each disc? It is a problem common to many organizations. People who are incompetent making decisions they think will increase their profits. When will they realize that when you give people what they want the profits will be even more? That's the negative, now to some positive things about the collection.
If you grew up with Charley Pride singing his songs on the radio, then Just Between You and Me and I Know One will bring back memories of real country music sung by real country singers. Charley Pride's distinctive voice made him a hit around the world. Have you noticed the current crop of country (?) singers sound the same? There is no tune, no melody, just the same unsuccessful attempt to put out another recording and repackage to the masses. If the music executives are listening, you should try to pick up a few points here. I would recommend this because it is a collection of ORIGINAL recordings. I really detest compilations that are re-recordings. They aren't the same, and they aren't as good. You will get many hours of pleasure from Country Charley Pride, as he was called. The younger generation is in for a treat because they will learn what real country music is. Who knows, maybe someday we will see a revival.
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Solid look at Pride's hit-making RCA years,
By
This review is from: Essential Charley Pride (Audio CD)
This double-disc set is a straight up reissue of 2003's "Anthology," featuring the same 40 tracks, and the same liner notes. That said, it's still the best introduction to Pride's great career at RCA, whatever RCA wants to use as a title. The material spans Pride's entire twenty year run at RCA, from his second single, 1966's "Before I Met You," through his final year's "Down on the Farm" in 1985. In between, the collection does an excellent job of cherry-picking from Pride's extensive catalog and eye-popping chart success. Out of 54 singles issued for RCA, 51 hit the country Top-10, and many of his chart-toppers crossed over to minor pop success.
Pride's commercial success began with the Grammy® winning top-10 "Just You and Me" from 1966. Written by Jack Clement and produced by Chet Atkins, Bob Ferguson and Clement, Pride's masterful baritone is set between twangy pedal steel and a countrypolitan background chorus. For all the recognition Pride has received as country music's first (and really only) African American superstar, his music, particularly as produced by Clement, is completely colorblind. His song choices speak to country music's universal experiences of love and loss, and his voice, while quite unique, is marked mostly by his Southern raising. Taking off from his first chart success, Pride minted an amazing streak of top-10s, including a run of #1s from 1969 through 1971. Of the six ("All I Have to Offer You (Is Me)," "(I'm So) Afraid of Losing You Again," "(Is Anybody Going To) San Antone," "Wonder Could I Live There Anymore," "I Can't Believe That You've Stopped Loving Me," and "I'd Rather Love You), only the last is missing from this set. Clement's use of chorus backings adds an element of resolve and strength to Pride's laments, creating the sense of a man who still has friends to help pick him up after various emotional devastations. His carefree whistling outro to "San Antone" suggests a happier future, and a cover of Merle Haggard's "A Shoulder to Cry On" is more apologetic than Haggard's desolate original. Pride could also sing happy songs, like his signature "Kiss an Angel Good Morning," topping the country chart and nearly edging into the pop Top-20. The faith-inspired follow-up, "All His Children" (from the film "Sometimes a Great Notion"), adds a sweeping chorus and a Henry Mancini string arrangement. Even more lush are the strings and harmonies for 1978's "Someone Loves You Honey." Pride continued to sound country in voice, even as the productions crossed over to the pop music featured on disc two. The early '80s brought the disco-fied #1 "Night Games" a twangy live cover of George Jones' "Why Baby Why," and the collection closing homage to small farms, "Down on the Farm." A recording career as deep as Pride's can't be fully covered in only two discs, and so there are missing hits (e.g., 1980's #1 "Honky Tonk Blues") and favorite album cuts that still await reissue. But with the bulk of Pride's catalog still in the vault, these forty tracks will need to sate those new to Pride's catalog, and whet the appetite of those who still hanging on to their original vinyl. [©2006 hyperbolium dot com]
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Good original recordings,
By Kevin L (Southern Nevada) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Essential Charley Pride (Audio CD)
Not all of his early songs, but most are there and they are originals unlike many other offerings.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Charley Pride,
By
This review is from: Essential Charley Pride (Audio CD)
Very good collection. Has some that are a little harder to find, like "All His Children" and "We Could." For the price, it's a good buy. All of your Charley Pride favorites can't be on one CD, but this one makes a good effort.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Charley Pride,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Essential Charley Pride (Audio CD)
Love some Charley Pride. I met him when I was very young and I will never forget how kind and considerate he was back then! I HAD to have some of his music! Great performer!
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Essential Charley Pride,
By
This review is from: Essential Charley Pride (Audio CD)
We brought this for our trip to Utah. It ment alot were going to visit My husbands grave site. Charley was my husband favorite artist. He sang and pick most of Charley song. Charley is apart of our family history with fond memories of many great times!
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I'm Outta Love,
By
This review is from: Essential Charley Pride (Audio CD)
Charley Pride is one of the best country singers ever. This set of CDs have some of his best Songs. Get your copy today.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Love that Charley!,
By
This review is from: Essential Charley Pride (Audio CD)
The Essential Charley Pride CD brings back such great memories.
I saw him live a couple of years ago and his voice is still perfect. The CD has most of his hits both from the start of his career and on. If you are a fan I would recommend this one! |
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Essential Charley Pride by Charley Pride (Audio CD - 2006)
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