Search - Dolly Parton :: Dolly (Box Set)

Dolly (Box Set)
Dolly Parton
Dolly (Box Set)
Genres: Country, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (26) - Disc #1
  •  Track Listings (26) - Disc #2
  •  Track Listings (25) - Disc #3
  •  Track Listings (22) - Disc #4

Dolly Parton Has Few Peers, And No One In Music Will Deny Her Powers As A Singer, A Storyteller And A Pop Star. From Her First National Hit In 1967, The Ironically Titled 'Dumb Blonde' (Nobody With A Lick Of Sense Ever Acc...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Dolly Parton
Title: Dolly (Box Set)
Members Wishing: 2
Total Copies: 0
Label: Sony Legacy
Original Release Date: 10/26/2009
Release Date: 10/26/2009
Album Type: Box set
Genres: Country, Pop
Styles: Outlaw Country, Classic Country, Today's Country
Number of Discs: 4
SwapaCD Credits: 4
UPCs: 6007124400437, 886974808626

Synopsis

Album Description
Dolly Parton Has Few Peers, And No One In Music Will Deny Her Powers As A Singer, A Storyteller And A Pop Star. From Her First National Hit In 1967, The Ironically Titled 'Dumb Blonde' (Nobody With A Lick Of Sense Ever Accused Dolly Of That!) And The Legendary '70s Duets With Porter Wagoner, From Her First Number One Single ('Joshua') In 1970 To Her 26th Number One In 1991 ('Rockin' Years,' A Duet With Ricky Shelton) And All Train Stops In Between, Dolly Has It All. 'To Know Him Is To Love Him' From The Fertile Three-Way Collaboration With Linda Ronstadt And Emmylou Harris, The Amazing Crossover Pop Smashes, Including The Heartfelt Duet With Kenny Rogers 'Islands In The Stream,' As Well As Revered Juke Box Staples '9 To 5' And 'Here You Come Again,' This 99 Track/4 CD Treasure Trove Covers All The Bases. You May Never Have To Leave Home Again, But If You Do, Be Sure To Take Dolly Along For The Ride. First-Ever Multi-Label, Career-Spanning Box Set For Dolly! 4 Cds, Over 100 Songs Includes Her Biggest Hits, Rarities, And Duets From Monument, Rca Victor, And Columbia + Seven Previously Unreleased Songs Introduction Written By Singer-Songwriter Laura Cantrell, And New Liner Notes Written By Noted Dolly Parton Historian Holly George-Warren Features Never-Before-Seen Photos And Rare Memorabilia! All The Big Hits, Including Jolene, 9 To 5, Coat Of Many Colors, Joshua, I Will Always Love You. Rarities And Previously Unreleased Tracks.

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CD Reviews

"Attention All Dolly Parton Fans!"
Terry Richard | Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada | 10/26/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Well here it is, a spectacular boxset on Dolly Parton. A few medicore boxsets on Dolly have been released over the years, but they all pale in comparison to this beautiful gem. Featuring an informative sixty page booklet on Miss Parton with rare pictures never seen before, the crowning jewel are seven tracks never released from Dolly's various record labels. The newly released songs are "Gonna Hurry (As Slow As I Can) which is one of the first songs Dolly ever recorded back in the 1950's; "Nobody But You" recorded when Dolly was 16 years old on Mercury Records; "I've Known You All My Life" from Dolly's Monument period; "Everything's Beautiful (In It's Own Way) that was originally recorded for "The Fairest of Them All" album in 1969; "God's Coloring Book" recorded during the "Coat of Many Colors" 1971 sessions; and finally "Eugene Oregon" and "What Will Baby Be" from 1972's "My Tennessee Mountain Home" album recordings. Out of these seven wonderful tracks four are really standouts; "Gonna Hurry" is true Dolly and she proves even at 10 years of age not only would she be a huge country music star, but a pop superstar. Her voice is pure, strong, original and unmistakingly Dolly. "Everything's Beautiful" is a song Dolly wrote before she came to Nashville and it is truely one of the most beautiful songs she has ever written. It was the song Dolly sang to Porter Wagoner the very day he called her to his office in 1967 to hire her as his "girl singer" on his TV and road show. "God's Coloring Book", that was later recorded for Dolly's 1977 "Here You Come Again" album, is far superior than the remake. You can hear a lot of the "Coat of Many Colors" sound and Dolly's vocal is impeccable and crystle pure. Lastly, "Eugene Oregon" has a neat tempo and is similar in vocal style to the rest of her "My Tennessee Mountain Home" recordings. Another great part about this boxset are the hardly heard singles and B-Sides that have rarely been released on CD over the years, most notably "Puppy Love", "It's Sure Gonna Hurt" and its B-Side "The Love You Gave", and the beautiful "Put It Off Until Tomorrow", which is actually a Bill Phillip's recording, but features Dolly doing background vocals uncredited. This particular recording is one of the most important Dolly recordings ever as it would persuade Dolly's then record label Monument, at Dolly's insistence, to record her country. Porter Wagoner would eventually discover her from her country oriented recordings on Monument and the rest is history. All of Dolly's huge hits are available here including "9 to 5", "I Will Always love You", "Jolene", "Joshua", "Heartbreaker", "Islands In The Stream", and many more. 11 Porter/Dolly duet hits are also included. This set is for the ardent Dolly fan who needs to have this boxset to complete their Dolly collection even if you have all her CD's and albums. This set is also a great place to start your Dolly collection as you will not find a more comprehensive packaging of her material anywhere. Four CD's with 99 songs and a beautiful career book included. We Dolly fans are finally in Heaven! This "Dolly" boxset sold enough copies to debut on the country album chart at #59."
The best Dolly box out there, but still not definitive...
Allen Chapman | STAFFORD SPRINGS, CT USA | 10/28/2009
(4 out of 5 stars)

"For years Dolly fans have been waiting for a definitive boxed set from her. "Dolly" comes pretty close to being just that. With 99 tracks spread across four CD's there is an awful lot to like here. The set starts off with her very first recording "Puppy Love" and goes up thru 1992's "Romeo". Along the way are her solo hits as well as her duets with Porter Wagoner. The set follows her career from the small GoldBand record label thru her stay at Columbia, the main focus being of course her long tenure with RCA. The set begins with a string of early singles recorded for Monument Records when Dolly was being pushed towards a Brenda Lee/girl group sound. The songs are catchy, but nothing like what she would eventually find fame with. After that and her connection with Porter Wagoner do the really great songs start coming. All of the hits are her from "Jolene" and "Joshua" to "I Will Always Love You", "Here You Come Again" and of course "9 to 5". Not to mention some great album cuts like "The Bridge", "Down From Dover" and many more.

For as great as the set is, there are few complaints. First is the fact that it ends in 1992. Dolly has continued to release some incredible records since then (such as her fantastic bluegrass albums from the past decade). Another complaint is that the massively successfull "Trio" album with Emmylou Harris and Linda Ronstadt is not represented at all. Despite having tons of great tracks, it's a shame they couldn't find room for her 1983 song "Appalachian Memories" one of her masterpieces. Finally, disc four is the least interesting of the bunch, the songs on disc four have been reissued so many times over the past several years that the disc is pretty redundant.

Complaints aside this is the best collection of Dolly's work out there. It's not THE definitive set, but it is the best there is. A treat for long time fans as well as those who may be just now discovering Dolly."
The 4-CD box set Dolly Parton (and her fans) deserve
hyperbolium | Earth, USA | 10/27/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Quick Take: 4-discs; nearly 5 hours of music; multi-label compilation spanning 1957-1993; superb, rarely heard early sides; deep helping of RCA catalog; select tracks from Columbia catalog; solos and duets; 8 previously unreleased tracks; 62 page booklet featuring a new 5,000-word biographical essay, vintage pictures and record cover reproductions. Missing are Parton's trio work with Emmylou Harris and Linda Ronstadt, and her terrific post-1993 back-to-basics work on MCA and Sugar Hill.



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Dolly Parton's outsized personality has occasionally obscured the fact that she's one of America's all-time greatest songwriters and an exceptional vocalist who effortlessly crossed from country to pop and back again. Her early years as Porter Wagoner's girl singer and duet partner, her television fame, her climb to solo country stardom, her painful split with Wagoner (brilliantly memorialized in her parting "I Will Always Love You," a three-time hit for Parton and a worldwide chart-topper for Whitney Houston), her crossover to pop, Hollywood filmmaking and theme parks, and finally, her return to country and bluegrass roots have shown Parton to be an artist of unparalleled vision, depth and humanity.



Parton's commercial success has stretched over four decades, including an incredible string of hit singles (including 25 U.S. #1s) and albums (including 42 U.S. top-10s and 6 chart-toppers), and multiple live recordings, soundtracks and collaborations. She's won gold and platinum records, Grammys, AMAs, CMAs, ACMs, and has been nominated for Oscar, Tony and Golden Globe awards. She's a member of the Grand Ole Opry, the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame, and the recipient of numerous national awards and tributes. Yet, with all the fame and honors, Parton has remained true to her rural upbringing in the hills of Tennessee, frequently returning to the hard lessons of her youth for inspiration and guidance. The values instilled by her dirt-poor upbringing have informed both her life and her art, as she frequently put stories and lessons from her childhood to song.



Among the most surprising aspects of Parton's recording career is how spottily her catalog has been kept in print or reissued. Numerous hits collections have found issue and reissue (including the excellent Essential set in 2005), and more recently a few original albums have been reissued on CD, but much of her RCA album catalog has remained in the vault, and until now, no major career-spanning (and more importantly, label-spanning) box set had been issued. RCA Legacy solves the latter problem with this superb 4-disc, 99-song set. The collection comes with a 60-page booklet that includes an introductory essay from singer-songwriter Laura Cantrell, a 5,000-word biography by Holly George-Warren, period photos and reproductions of many of Parton's album covers.



More importantly, the 4 CDs cover a big helping Parton's career, including rare late-50s pre-teen sides on Goldband, early work for Mercury and Monument, a generous helping from nearly two decades on RCA, and a smattering of tracks from her years on Columbia, ending with 1993's "Romeo." Missing are sides from her 1998 back-to-basics album Hungry Again, the inventive releases she cut for Sugar Hill in the `90s and `00s, and last year's Backwoods Barbie. So while it's not a complete portrait, the ready availability of these later albums suggests their omission made room for the rare early works, deeper album cuts and seven previously unreleased recordings, while still maintaining the core hit material one would expect of a mainstream box set.



Those who've hung on to their original LPs or snapped up CD reissues will duplicate a good deal of Parton's hits, but there are many new riches here. The eleven-year-old Parton's voice is faintly recognizable on the 1957 Goldband single "Puppy Love" and its flip, "Girl Left Alone." The A-side is an original rockabilly tune, co-written with her uncle Bill Owens (with whom she'd also write her first charting song, Bill Phillips' "Put it Off Until Tomorrow," also included); the B-side is an original country ballad, again written with Owens. Parton's voice is juvenilely high and thin, but she was already singing with tremendous feeling. The previously unreleased "Gonna Hurry (As Slow As I Can)" is a finished '50s-styled ballad that sounds to be from a couple years later. The pre-teen edge to Parton's voice was giving way to the trilled edge that would come to define her singing.



Skipping forward five years to 1962, Parton cut a single for Mercury while still in high school. The A-side "It's Sure Gonna Hurt," co-written again by Parton and Phillips, perfectly evokes the pain of a teenager's broken heart with the mid-tempo countrypolitan-pop sound of Brenda Lee and Connie Francis. The B-side "The Love You Gave" continues the romantic turmoil, and the unreleased session side "Nobody But You" finds Parton adding a hint of rockabilly with her upper range. By 1965 Parton was signed to Monument, who groomed her as a teen pop star. Among the highlights here are the brilliant Shangri-Las styled "Don't Drop Out," complete with a dramatically spoken intro, and the obscure Goffin-King composition "I've Known You All My Life." None of these made the charts, but Parton sounds so convincing and at-home, you can hear why they tried.



Having failed to break her as a pop star, Monument let Parton record country, releasing her first two charting singles "Dumb Blonde" and "Something Fishy," as well as her debut album, Hello, I'm Dolly. Parton's songwriting emerged fully formed in songs of hurting and abandoned women, home-spun morals, and the colorful characters of rural life. She soon departed for RCA, but left enough tracks in the vault for Monument to issue a second album in 1970. Parton stayed at RCA for nearly two decades, her career initially shepherded closely by Porter Wagoner, with whom she recorded numerous duets. One listen to their chemistry on a 1967 cover of Tom Paxton's "Last Thing on My Mind" makes it clear just how painful their separation must have been for Wagoner. The loss of her business may have stung, but the departure of such a feeling duet partner must have really hurt.



Parton's solo sides, whether originals or pulled from Nashville songwriters, continued to make emotional strides to self-awareness (and eventually self-empowerment) as her downtrodden women took clear-eyed stock of their situations. Parton's original, "The Bridge," depicts a relationship's pastoral beginnings and tragic, helpless ending, but the title track of Just Because I'm a Woman, calls out the hypocrisy with which women were treated. Her RCA catalog fills out disc one, all of discs two and three, and nearly half of disc four with hits, lower-charting singles and lesser-known but no less rewarding album tracks. This is easily the most expansive view you'll find of her development as a songwriter and singer. The volume of quality original material and the imaginative range of her subjects are staggering, and the new fire she brings to chestnuts like Jimmie Rodgers' "Muleskinner Blues" is just as impressive.



Even after splitting with Wagoner in 1976 the hits kept coming. Parton's first self-produced album, New Harvest... First Gathering was recorded in Los Angeles and edged "Light of a Clear Blue Morning" onto Billboard's Hot-100. Her next LP, Here You Come Again, sprung its title song to #2 on the adult contemporary chart and #3 on the Hot 100. Hollywood Dolly really hit her crossover peak in the early `80s with "9 to 5," a cover of the First Edition's "You Know I Love You," "Islands in the Sun," and a modernized remake of the Drifters' "Save the Last Dance For Me." In contrast to the box set's first two discs, Parton's crossover material is often taken from other songwriters' pens, and doesn't ring as heartfelt or close-to-the-bone as her earlier works. Still, even among the mainstream pop she dropped the home-spun "Applejack" and "Old Flames Can't Hold a Candle to You," the gospel-tinged "Do I Ever Cross Your Mind," and the superb "Tennessee Homesick Blues" from the Rhinestone film soundtrack.



By the middle-80s Parton's production had fallen into others' hands, and they increasingly surrounded her with synthetic drums and synthesizers. Parton herself was still in fine voice, but the chill in the instrumental backings didn't connect with or amplify her personal warmth, and the arrangements have aged poorly. A switch to Columbia in the late `80s returned Parton to country songwriting and more timeless pop productions. Disc four's closing eight tracks, drawn from albums recorded between 1988 and 1993, restore Parton's identity as a songwriter, and Ricky Skaggs' production (which drew on some hot-picking bluegrass musicians) for White Limozeen was the most sympathetic she'd had in several years. Many of Parton's fans will enjoy the entire tour through the first thirty-seven years of her career, but those mostly enchanted by the country sides will find themselves skipping her late-70s and early-80s pop material. Don't miss the Columbia sides on disc four, though, as they're superb.



Leaving off Parton's resurgent sides for Sugar Hill keeps this box from being a complete portrait to date. Her work on Columbia shows the artistic well far from dry, and her return to basic productions and bluegrass backings in the `90s and `00s are an important chapter in her stll-lively career. Still, these four discs amply demonstrate that Parton is much more than a singer and songwriter: she's a folklorist, cultural anthropologist, family historian, philosopher and memoirist. Her autobiography, Dolly: My Life and Other Unfinished Business, is a good read, but can't possibly offer the emotional richness of songs like "My Tennessee Mountain Home" or "Coat of Many Colors." What's really missing, and what Parton's fans long for, are original album reissues of her entire RCA and Columbia catalogs. Bear Family, are you listening? [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]"