Porter Wagoner - Wagonmaster

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Album Details

Title: Wagonmaster
Artist: Porter Wagoner
Release Date: 6/5/2007
Label: Anti
Duration: 52:51
Album Type(s): lyrics/libretto
UPCs: 045778685929, 8714092685923, 871409268592
Genre: Country
Style: Traditional Country
Moods: Bittersweet, Laid-Back/Mellow, Plaintive, Organic, Reflective, Stylish, Autumnal, Earnest, Gentle, Melancholy, Poignant, Refined/Mannered, Brooding, Lively, Rousing, Smooth, Weary
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 3
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Wagonmaster, Pt. 1
  2. Be a Little Quieter
  3. Who Knows Right from Wrong
  4. Albert Erving
  5. A Place to Hang My Hat
  6. Eleven Cent Cotton
  7. My Many Hurried Southern Trips
  8. Committed to Parkview
  9. The Agony of Waiting
  10. Buck and the Boys
  11. Fool Like Me
  12. Late Love of Mine
  13. Hotwired
  14. Brother Harold Dee
  15. Satan's River
  16. Wagonmaster, Pt. 2
  17. Porter & Marty: Men with Broken Hearts/(I Heard That) Lonesome Whistle

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2007CDAnti86859
2007CDAnti68482

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

That Porter Wagoner released a new album during the year of his 80th birthday -- some 55 years after his first recording -- is an event worth celebrating in itself. That it is consistent with the best work of his career is remarkable. Wagoner has always played it straight -- his brand of mainstream country-tonk never was as fashionable as his spangled stage outfits, and he never pretended to be an outlaw -- and that's just what he continues to do here. Though his baritone is more weathered than during his prime, Wagoner sounds decades younger on Wagonmaster, and there remains a youthful exuberance to the music. The only obvious signs of his age surface during the spoken word sections, such as the intros to "Albert Erving," a song of abject loneliness, and "Committed to Parkview," which Johnny Cash wrote for Wagoner but never recorded himself. Like many songs in Wagoner's canon, it's eerie, creepy, and more than a little bit sad, a vivid account of life inside a Nashville asylum, listening to the "guests," one of whom "thinks he's Hank Williams." One of the highlights of Wagonmaster, the song was presented to Wagoner -- himself a former "guest" at the facility, as had been Cash -- by Marty Stuart, who took a no-frills, purist's approach to his production of Wagonmaster (pedal steel rules!). There are songs of hard loss ("The Late Love of Mine," "Be a Little Quieter") and hard work, songs of faith (the back-to-back "Brother Harold Dee" and "Satan's River"), and songs of good times too -- all of them are classic Wagoner, one of the last of the true giants of Nashville's golden era. ~ Jeff Tamarkin, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Adam SmithPhotography
Brian GlennBass, Bass (Upright)
Buck TrentBanjo, Electric Banjo
Carl JacksonVocals (Background)
Eric FritschPiano, Organ (Hammond)
Fred NewellPedal Steel, Guitar (Steel)
Gordon MotePiano
Harry StinsonDrums
Jim DeMainMastering
Joey TurnerEngineer, Mixing, Overdubs
Kenny VaughanGuitar (Acoustic), Guitar (Electric), Guitar, Archguitar
Maria Elena OrbeanProduction Coordination
Marty StuartPhotography, Guitar (Acoustic), Vocals (Background), Producer, Audio Production, Guitar (Electric), Poetry
Mike JohnsonPedal Steel, Guitar (Steel)
MotePiano
Porter WagonerAuthor
Scott MunnExecutive Producer
Stoker WhiteAssistant
Stuart DuncanGuitar (Acoustic), Fiddle