You'll Never Miss the Water (Till the Well Runs Dry) - The Buckaroos, Owens, B.
Seven Come Eleven - The Buckaroos, Brumley, T.
Tumwater Breakdown - The Buckaroos, Rich, D.
My Baby's Comin' Home - The Buckaroos, Rich, D.
Apple Jack - The Buckaroos, Brumley, T.
Tom's Waltz - The Buckaroos, Brumley, T.
Highway Man - The Buckaroos, Owens, B.
Sad Is the Lonely - The Buckaroos, Warren, B.
Pedal Patter - The Buckaroos, Brumley, T.
Woman Truck Drivin' Fool - The Buckaroos, Holly, D.
Too Many Chiefs (Not Enough Indians) - The Buckaroos, Morris, B.
Anywhere, U.S.A. - The Buckaroos, Holiman, D.
Moonlight on the Desert - The Buckaroos, Brumley, T.
Bad Luck and Bad Wather - The Buckaroos, Morris, B.
Sweet-T-Pie - The Buckaroos, Maness, J.
Cinderella - The Buckaroos, Mize, B.
Cajun Steel Guitar - The Buckaroos, Owens, B.
Spotlighting the flying fingers of Buckaroos guitar-picking whiz Don Rich, the full-bodied pedal steel of Tom Brumley and the rocksteady rhythm of bassist Doyle Holly backed by the solid beat of drummers Willie Cantu an... more »d Jerry Wiggins, this Buckaroos smorgasbord is the perfect introduction to the band that created the Bakersfield Sound behind country music Hall of Famer Buck Owens. Here's the definitive example of their forward-thinking style -- an electrified honky-tonk sound that wowed the crowds wherever they played. This set clearly defines what made the vibrant Bakersfield sound of Buck Owens and the Buckaroos compelling enough to grab the country charts by the throat in the mid-'60s and not let go, while scoring plenty of cross-over pop-chart success at the same time.« less
Spotlighting the flying fingers of Buckaroos guitar-picking whiz Don Rich, the full-bodied pedal steel of Tom Brumley and the rocksteady rhythm of bassist Doyle Holly backed by the solid beat of drummers Willie Cantu and Jerry Wiggins, this Buckaroos smorgasbord is the perfect introduction to the band that created the Bakersfield Sound behind country music Hall of Famer Buck Owens. Here's the definitive example of their forward-thinking style -- an electrified honky-tonk sound that wowed the crowds wherever they played. This set clearly defines what made the vibrant Bakersfield sound of Buck Owens and the Buckaroos compelling enough to grab the country charts by the throat in the mid-'60s and not let go, while scoring plenty of cross-over pop-chart success at the same time.