Product Details
The Essential Ray Price (1951-1962)

The Essential Ray Price (1951-1962)
Ray Price

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Track Listing

  1. If You're Ever Lonely Darling
  2. Road of No Return
  3. Turn to Your Heart
  4. Move on in and Stay
  5. I'll Be There (If You Ever Want Me)
  6. Release Me
  7. I Can't Go Home Like This
  8. You Done Me Wrong
  9. Falling Falling Falling
  10. Wasted Words
  11. Crazy Arms
  12. I've Got a New Heartache
  13. My Shoes Keep Walking Back to You
  14. Invitation to the Blues
  15. City Lights
  16. Heartaches by the Number
  17. Same Old Me
  18. One More Time
  19. Heart Over Mind
  20. Pride

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #131254 in Music
  • Released on: 1991-10-22
  • Number of discs: 1

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com essential recording
Before moving to the greener pastures of string-heavy countrypolitan, Price was a challenger for the honky-tonk crown. These 20 songs marvelously outline the rapid development of Price's emerging style. His 1951 debut, Lefty Frizzell's "If You're Ever Lonely Darling," finds Price emulating Frizzell's sweet delivery, while two ballads from the following year show Price firmly in Hank Williams territory. By 1953, his voice matured into a booming force, balancing the early sweetness with a hint of spice and a new vigor. The defining moment came in 1956 with the release of "Crazy Arms" and the unveiling of the Western swing-influenced "Ray Price Shuffle." From that point, Price would consistently feature this smooth and steady beat, even covering Bob Wills's "My Shoes Keep Walking Back to You." --Marc Greilsamer


Customer Reviews

Outstanding Collection of 50's Honky Tonk5
Don't buy this collection if you're looking for "For the Good Times" and the other "Nashville Sound" productions Ray Price put out in the late sixties and early seventies. However, if you like hard-core honky tonk out of the 1950's, this is a must. The collection takes you from Ray's earliest work (in which he sounds remarkably like Hank Williams) to the string of hits he had after quickly developing his own unique brand. His voice was clear, the arrangments and harmonies oustanding, and the songwriting top-knotch, coming from the likes of Mel Tillis, Roger Miller, Harlan Howard, Lefty Frizzel, Bob Wills, and Bill Anderson. Fear not, these are not re-records but the originals of "Heartaches by the Number", "Please Release Me", "Crazy Arms", "City Lights", and many others. Outstanding!

It will consume you!5
The first half of this album reminds me of more classic honky-tonk, Hank Williams-ish voice and musical vibe. It's good, notably "I'll Be There" and "Release Me". To my taste, though, from "Wasted Words" on to the end of the record there isn't a bad note on this album; this is chronologically later material, with a more evolved sound, stellar pedal steel guitar playing (some, if not all of which is probably the great Buddy Emmons), Ray's voice is fantastic, the cuts are beautifully put together, not overdone, and it'll have you screaming, singing, and crying. This is music for whoopin' it up, or for bourbon and heartbreak. One of my desert-island discs, truly. Night Life, also Ray Price, is another absolutely fantastic record.

serious honky tonk5
if you want a disk that defines honky tonk after hank williams, this is a great place to start. every tune is outstanding. i guess ray price in these years is about as good as it gets. the steel doesn't just whine, it bleeds. and the fiddles cut in just the way they ought to. then there's ray's really superior voice, and then there are those HARMONIES. the best.