Product Details
King Of The Road: The Genius Of Roger Miller

King Of The Road: The Genius Of Roger Miller
Roger Miller

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Track Listing

Disc 1:

  1. My Pillow
  2. Poor Little John
  3. Man Like Me
  4. Wrong Kind of Girl
  5. Jason Fleming
  6. World So Full of Love [#]
  7. When a House (Is Not a Home) [#]
  8. You Don't Want My Love
  9. When Two Worlds Collide
  10. Sorry, Willie
  11. So Saith He the Lord [#]
  12. Lock, Stock and Teardrops
  13. Ain't That Fine
  14. Less and Less [#]
  15. Chug-A-Lug
  16. Lou's Got the Flu
  17. Moon Is High (And So Am I)
  18. Dang Me
  19. It Takes All Kinds to Make a World
  20. Reincarnation
  21. Hard Headed Me
  22. Do-Wacka-Do
  23. Atta Boy Girl
  24. Our Hearts Will Play the Music

Disc 2:

  1. King of the Road
  2. As Long as There's a Shadow
  3. You Can't Roller Skate in a Buffalo Herd
  4. Heartbreak Hotel
  5. Big Harlan Taylor
  6. One Dyin' and a Buryin'
  7. Last Word in Lonesome Is Me
  8. It Happened Just That Way
  9. Engine, Engine #9
  10. Kansas City Star
  11. England Swings
  12. I've Been a Long Time Leavin'
  13. Husbands and Wives
  14. Train of Life
  15. Dad Blame Anything a Man Can't Quit
  16. You're My Kingdom
  17. My Uncle Used to Love Me But She Died
  18. Home
  19. Absence
  20. Ruby, Don't Take Your Love to Town
  21. Walkin' in the Sunshine
  22. Million Years or So
  23. Pardon This Coffin

Disc 3:

  1. Ballad of Waterhole #3
  2. Old Toy Trains
  3. Little Green Apples
  4. What I'd Give to Be the Wind
  5. Boeing Boeing 707
  6. Treat Me Like a Human [#][Outtake]
  7. What Are Those Things (With Big Black Wings)
  8. Only Daddy That'll Walk the Line [#]
  9. Swiss Cottage Place
  10. Me and Bobby McGee
  11. Where Have All the Average People Gone
  12. Best of All Possible Worlds
  13. Invitation to the Blues
  14. Tall Tall Trees
  15. Don't We All Have the Right
  16. That's the Way I Feel
  17. Half a Mind
  18. Hoppy's Gone
  19. What Would My Mama Say
  20. Orange Blosson Special [Live][#]
  21. Old Friends - Roger Miller, Willie Nelson, Ray Price
  22. Guv'ment
  23. River in the Rain

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #9285 in Music
  • Released on: 1995-08-22
  • Number of discs: 3
  • Format: Box set
  • Dimensions: .82 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Comedy gets no respect. If Merle Haggard sums up the dilemma of the American working class from the hard-bitten perspective of "Mama Tried" or "The Bottle Let Me Down," he's called a blue-collar poet. If Roger Miller captures the same predicament from the warped, comic perspective of "You Can't Roller Skate in a Buffalo Herd," he's dismissed as a novelty writer. And yet, a great comic song is just as hard to write as a serious one and sheds just as much light on its subject. Nashville has been home to some gifted comic songwriters over the years--Tom T. Hall, Shel Silverstein, John Prine, and so on--but Miller was the best of the bunch and, as such, one of the best songwriters country music has ever known. He's finally getting some overdue respect with the release of a three-CD anthology, King of the Road: The Genius of Roger Miller. Almost everyone is aware of "King of the Road," the shining pinnacle of Miller's career and one of the most perfect country songs ever written. Many of us remember his brief moment in the sun in 1964-66, when he not only dominated the country charts but also put 10 songs in the pop top-40--including such top-10 hits as "Dang Me," "Chug-a-Lug," "King of the Road," "Engine Engine #9," and "England Swings." Exuberant, infectious comic classics one and all, but The Genius of Roger Miller reveals there was a lot more to this quirky artist than that. --Geoffrey Himes


Customer Reviews

A great box set that could've been even greater4
Using the word genius to describe Roger Miller somehow seems to fall short. One listen through this box set will perfectly illustrate that. Even the casual Roger Miller fan will find this box set worth every penny.

The main problem with the current in-print catalog of Roger's songs is that the majority (okay, nearly ALL) of the releases are "best-ofs" and "greatest hits" than only offer 10-15 tracks...or 20, at best. Considering the brevity of most of Roger's songs (most are around the 2-minute mark), you're looking at CDs that clock in at 20-40 minutes. While the music is undoubtably great, these discs are underselling Roger's other works. Shockingly, none of Roger's original Smash albums are available in their entirety anymore. They may be some of the last great country albums not to be reissued in the CD age.

This box set does a great job of compiling all of the key points of Roger's career, from the mid 50s country sessions to the early 60s RCA sessions, to the famous Smash years, and beyond. Most of the essential tracks are here, and as such, it's the only in-print release that even comes close to being comprehensive. The Bear Family "King of the Road" single CD is a nice companion that collects the full RCA sessions (his most underrated work, in my opinion). Other than that, there is little on CD that hasn't been covered by this box.

My only beef is that this box doesn't quite take up the room available on the 3 CDs. More great songs from Roger's career could've been squeezed on here. Maybe I'm nitpicking, but when a song like "Every Which-a-Way" is missing, you aren't getting a definitive package. Still, this box is the best thing out there and it comes highly recommended.

If I had my way, there would be a two CD set that collected the first four Smash albums: Dang Me, Return of Roger Miller, Third Time Around, and Words and Music...all remastered and presented in their entire glory. While the key tracks (i.e. the hits) from these albums are on the box set already, several more gems lay within these albums. Surely there is market out there for these originals album to see the light of day once again...

One final note...the box set here contains 4-5 tracks from Roger's 1970 album "A Trip in the Country" where Roger recorded his own versions of the songs he wrote for George Jones, Faron Young, and others in the late 50s and early 60s. This is truly the hidden gem within Roger's discography. Why this entire album isn't available is a mystery. Search for the original vinyl or enjoy the slice available on this box set. It shows just how important of a songwriter Roger was before the public had even heard of him.

The only way to get some rare Roger Miller recordings4
While most reviewers focus on Miller's talents as a humorist, this collection is careful to portray him primarily as a song writer, and rarely refers to his "novelty" tendencies. The first two disks contain some treasures familiar to any Miller fan, and bring a smile of pure joy to my face whenever I listen to them. I found the third disk to be a disappointment - Miller was not at his best performing other people's music, and the third disk contains few of his original compositions. However, for anyone who wants Miller recordings beyond the 5 or 6 standards that appear on every "greatest hits" collection, this in-depth collection is the way to go.

This may change your life5
I would guess that this man's work would have limited appeal. It's crazy and it's country and not a lot of people like either one, but especially when you put the two together. But there was a fire in this man that you can feel, I hope, burning hot and bright for at least 2 1/2 hours of this 3 hour set. And his fire burnt hotter and brighter than just about any other that I've come across. As a country songwriter, maybe only Hank is his equal. As a performer, he might be in a class of his own. There is as much wit and irreverence in the performance of songs like "My Uncle Used To Love Me But She Died" as there are in the lyrics. Then you hear him turn around and deliver something with remarkable poignance like "A World So Full of Love," and he pulls this off with heart-stopping grace and fluidity. Then he does "Lou's Got The Flu" and you get both the irreverent and the poignant in the same song, and you find yourself picking your jaw off the floor for the hundredth time, only this time you can't seem to get it back in place the right way again.

This may not happen for you. But if you have a) a sense of humor, and b) a tender heart, it probably will. I'm not even sure if you have to like country music or not, but that helps too, even though an appreciation for "depressive jazz" might be just as helpful.

After being introduced to Roger over the last year, appreciating new music is even more difficult than it was before. There is so little else out there in the world of creative works that captures this wide spectrum of human emotion and thought.