Even before his first hits (including two duets with Webb Pierce) in the mid-'50s on Decca, Red Sovine, who later discovered Charley Pride, was a master honky-tonker and one of the last remaining exponents of the dying art of spoken recitation. After hitting his stride with Nashville-based Starday Records in 1965 with "Giddyup Go," he joined Dave Dudley and Dick Curless at the top of the then-vibrant trucker-music market. He applied his storytelling skills to the trucker tunes "Phantom 309" and the sentimental, million-selling 1976 CB-themed recitation "Teddy Bear." But Sovine also had a power... [Read More]
The truck-driving classics and the rest of the best by this West Virginia honky-tonk hero! Includes his hits Giddyup Go; Teddy Bear; Little Rosa; Phantom 309; Little Joe; It'll Come Back; I Didn't Jump the Fence; Daddy's Girl; Last Goodbye; I Know You're Married but I Love You Still, and 10 more.
Two CDs. This collection of personal favorites and important milestones is the first anthology to span Pettys entire career, from the first album to Mudcrutch 2. The album contains 38 tracks including the hits quot;Free
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