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Showing posts with label JERRY REED – "Jerry Reed/Hot A' Mighty/Lord Mr. Ford/The Uptown Poker Club" (May 2019 UK Beat Goes On – 4LPs Remastered onto 2CDs). Show all posts
Showing posts with label JERRY REED – "Jerry Reed/Hot A' Mighty/Lord Mr. Ford/The Uptown Poker Club" (May 2019 UK Beat Goes On – 4LPs Remastered onto 2CDs). Show all posts

Saturday 16 November 2019

"Jerry Reed/Hot A' Mighty/Lord Mr. Ford/The Uptown Poker Club" by JERRY REED – Four Albums from 1972 and 1973 (3) originally on RCA Victor Records (May 2019 UK Beat Goes On Reissue – 4LPs onto 2CDs – Andrew Thompson Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...





"...Dreaming Of Henry Ford..."

This is the kind of twofer reissue that Beat Goes On Records of the UK does so well (BGO for short) - four now forgotten and obscure albums remastered in full onto two CDs by Audio Engineer Andrew Thompson. You get a classy looking card slipcase – foldout double jewel case, new liner notes and a decent asking price. The original vinyl was "Jerry Reed" from 1972 alongside three from early to late 1973 - "Hot A' Mighty", "Lord, Mr. Ford" and "The Uptown Poker Club" - all originally on RCA Victor Records in the USA.

UK released 31 May 2019 - Beat Goes On BGOCD1377 (Barcode 5017261213778) offers up all four albums newly remastered in high def in their entirety - the third platter included giving the witty Georgia Boy a US Country Music No. 1 with the oil, gas, wheezing, automobile spluttering song "Lord, Mr. Ford" - a lyrically very funny tune by Dick Feller that tapped into the truckers craze of the early Seventies.

In fact wit abounds in songs choices like "Alabama Wild Man" and the Rock n' Roll tribute album of sorts "Hot A' Mighty" where he tackles hunks of Chuck Berry but still manages to slot in Mickey Newbury's "Sweet Memories". With Chet Atkins production across all four of the platters (played Guitar too on most) and a huge bevvy of quality Nashville players – it’s no wonder that the audio transfers are lovely - really clear and full of body. His acting career skyrocketed then (eventually becoming integral to the Smokey & The Bandit films) and he gave music a bit of a back seat.

For sure Seventies Country music (on RCA especially) has had the reputation of being just the wrong side of hick - but when Reed covers songs like Rodney Crowell's "You Can't Keep Me Here In Tennessee" and "Everybody Has Those Kind Of Days" whilst throwing in his own "It's Tough All Over" – JR showed his smarts and sass at picking a winning tune. It can be dated in places as these albums tended to be, but this is a very good reissue from BGO (yet again) highlighting a songwriter and personality who deserves a second-go-round. Nice one...

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