Product Details
America's Most Colorful Hillbilly Band

America's Most Colorful Hillbilly Band
The Maddox Brothers & Rose

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Average customer review:

Track Listing

  1. George's Playhouse Boogie
  2. Midnight Train
  3. Shimmy Shakin' Daddy
  4. Careless Driver
  5. Move It on Over
  6. Whoa, Sailor
  7. Milk Cow Blues
  8. Mean and Wicked Boogie
  9. Brown Eyes
  10. Honky Tonkin'
  11. Time nor Tide
  12. New Mule Skinner Blues
  13. Philadelphia Lawyer
  14. Sally Let Your Bangs Hang Down
  15. When I Lay My Burden Down
  16. Hangover Blues
  17. Water Baby Boogie
  18. Dark as a Dungeon
  19. Mule Train
  20. Oklahoma Sweetheart Sally Ann
  21. Faded Love
  22. New Step It up and Go
  23. (Pay Me) Alimony
  24. I Wish I Was a Single Girl Again
  25. Your Love Light Never Shone
  26. Meanest Man in Town
  27. I Want to Live and Love

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #121619 in Music
  • Released on: 1993-12-02
  • Number of discs: 1

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
The Maddox Brothers & Rose were America's most colorful hillbilly band all right, and not just because they wore snazzy sequined Western suits that screamed louder than a blast of TNT. Everything they did was at the top of their lungs, from sister Rose's effectively braying twang and tittering, high-pitched asides to the brothers' nuclear-charged postwar fusion of boogie-woogie, Western swing, and California honky-tonk. Most colorful of all was the group's aesthetic--unabashed emotionalism on a poignant gospel ballad such as "When I Lay My Burden Down" alternating with broad comedy displayed on covers of "Milk Cow Blues" and "Honky Tonkin'." "Got a hillbilly band called Maddox and Rose ... [and] they play a boogie-woogie that'll wiggle your toes," Rose guffaws on "George's Playhouse Boogie." Never has such a colorful self-description been so accurate. --David Cantwell


Customer Reviews

Too many mistakes for 5 stars.4
First off, I must say the music included here is some of the craziest, most outlandish honky tonk music ever recorded. I have never heard music performed that was so good.

But the problem here doesn't lay with the music. The problem lies with the cd itself. Music this important deserves better treatment.

The biggest problem is the fact that the song "I Want to Live and Love" is here twice, once under it's name and once under the name "New Mule Skinner Blues." That is an almost unexcusable error in a collection this important. (Their version of "New Mule Skinner Blues" is on Volume 2).

Next, no where in the booklet is there any recording dates or even a simple explanation of what label the music was recorded for. It says they were signed to Columbia records in 1951, but it also says the recordings included here were recorded between 1946 and 1951.

The sound quality is alright for recordings this old.

A release this important deserves better.

I still recommend this collection, but I wish it was taken more seriously by Arhoolie Records.

Some of the wildest music of its day5
Though the Maddoxes began recording long before the emergence of rock 'n' roll and rockabilly in the early '50s, the numbers included on this generous 27-song collection - lifted from the group's sessions for the 4-Star label in the late '40s and early '50s - pointed the way for others to follow. One can easily hear the enormous influence that bassist/vocalist Fred Maddox had on the rockabilly bassists who followed him, including Bill Black and Dorsey Burnette. And lead guitarist Roy Nichols displays the ample chops that he would later employ to great effect with the likes of Lefty Frizzell, Wynn Stewart, and Merle Haggard. The most impressive thing about the Maddoxes, though, is that their records were Fun with a capital "F." Sure they never enjoyed much popularity outside of their west coast base, but their records have stood the test of time far better than some others of the era and you're a better person than I am if you can stifle a smile while listening to the almighty racket that the group made. Most of the songs are punctuated by the kinds of whoops and hollers and laughing that would be commonplace on rockabilly records made nearly a decade later, and more than a few sound like someone is building a house in the studio while the group was recording. If you're a musician who's getting a little too full of the "art" of playing music, give a listen to the Maddoxes for a reminder of what music sounds like when it's played for fun...and sounds like it.

hillbillys gone wild!!!5
This is it man. If you haven't got this,stop, don't go any further.Rock and Roll from the 40's!!! A crazed mix of baudy shoutouts, spirituals,early honky tonk,ballads, miner work songs, everything they had ever heard thrown into the pot and turned up to FULL BOIL!!! If your girl says she doesn't like country except for Patsy Cline (uhhhh, country, yeahhh...), turn her on to this and she'll be sportin' cuffed jeans and kicker boots in no time flat,brother!!! This is everything right about music, everything that those snooty alterna-rock snobs will never understand. Absolutely,positively,utterly essential.