Johnny Horton - Honky Tonk Man: The Essential Johnny Horton 1956-1960

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Album Details

Title: Honky Tonk Man: The Essential Johnny Horton 1956-1960
Artist: Johnny Horton
Release Date: 1996
Label: Columbia/Legacy
Duration: 84:11
Album Type(s): Greatest Hits
UPCs: 074646476123, 074646476147
Genre: Country
Styles: Traditional Country, Rockabilly, Honky Tonk, Country Boogie
Moods: Amiable/Good-Natured, Earnest, Earthy, Rollicking, Bright, Light, Playful, Relaxed, Warm, Rustic, Sentimental, Pastoral, Reflective
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 3
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 2

Track Listings Disc 1

  1. Honky Tonk Man
  2. I'm a One Woman Man
  3. Take Me Like I Am
  4. I Don't Like I Did
  5. Hooray for That Little Difference
  6. I'm Coming Home
  7. She Knows Why
  8. Honky Tonk Mind (The Woman I Need)
  9. Goodbye Lonesome, Hello Baby Doll
  10. I'll Do It Everytime
  11. Let's Take the Long Way Home
  12. Lover's Rock
  13. Honky Tonk Hardwood Floor
  14. The Wild One
  15. Hot in the Sugarcane Field
  16. Wise to the Ways of a Woman
  17. Out in New Mexico
  18. I Love You Baby

Track Listings Disc 2

  1. All Grown Up
  2. Got the Bull by the Horns
  3. When It's Springtime in Alaska (It's Forty Below)
  4. The Battle of New Orleans
  5. Lost Highway
  6. Cherokee Boogie
  7. The Golden Rocket
  8. Words
  9. Johnny Reb
  10. Sal's Got a Sugarlip
  11. The Electrified Donkey
  12. Sink the Bismarck
  13. Ole Slew Foot
  14. Sleepy-Eyed John
  15. The Mansion You Stole
  16. North to Alaska
  17. Evil Hearted Me
  18. You Don't Move Me Baby Anymore

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
1996CDColumbia/Legacy64761

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

This 36-track double-CD set, running just under an hour and a half, effectively chronicles Johnny Horton's Columbia Records career. The first disc, which is in mono, traces Horton's honky-tonk work of 1956-1957, starting with "Honky Tonk Man." Though lacking the crossover appeal of his later work at the time, this is the material on which his reputation stands today, with people like Dwight Yoakam resurrecting it. The end of the first disc and the beginning of the second (which is in stereo) present the stylistic fishing expedition of Horton's commercially unsuccessful middle period, as be goes looking for a bit. He finds it, of course, with the martial rhythms and historical theme of "The Battle of New Orleans," a chart-topping novelty that leads to a string of similar productions. By the end, in songs like "The Mansion You Stole," Horton seems headed toward the lush, string-filled Nashville Sound, though he died before it gained dominance. Along the way, all of Horton's Country chart singles and most of his pop chart singles are included, along with two tracks, previously unreleased in the U.S. Of course, the set could have been considerably longer (or, better yet, shaved by a few tracks and fit onto a single disc), but nothing essential is missing. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Bob IrwinCompilation Producer
Colin EscottLiner Notes, Photography
Debra ParkinsonMastering
Frank DriggsPhotography
Frank JonesProducer
George RicheyProducer
Johnny HortonMain Performer, Vocals
Julian PeploeDesign, Art Direction
Ken FredetteArtwork
Lisa SparaganoArtwork
Mark WilderMixing
Michael OchsPhotography