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RIP Lee Hazlewood

Posted: 6 Aug 2007 2:55 am
by nick allen
Sad loss of a very interesting guy. Producing Duane Eddy and writing "These Boots..." alone would give him a major place in pop history.
Interesting links here, especially the radio interview.
http://weekendamerica.publicradio.org/p ... mes_o.html
Nick

Posted: 6 Aug 2007 1:13 pm
by Alvin Blaine
I heard that radio interview last month on the local Vegas station. I was almost tempted to go to his "Final Party".

What an influence on pop music for the past 50 years. He also was the first guy to sign Gram Parsons to a deal. They put out The International Submarine Band album 'Safe at home' on Lee's LHI label. That album is one of the very first country-rock albums.

He didn't just produce Duane Eddy, Lee came up with the whole idea of the twang guitar instrumental album. He tried to get another session players, Al Casey, to do it but Casey just kept playing everything like Chet Atkins. So Lee supposedly showed the rhythm player how he wanted the parts done, and that guy was Duane Eddy.

Posted: 6 Aug 2007 1:39 pm
by Jody Sanders
Another great talent gone. Jody.

Posted: 6 Aug 2007 2:46 pm
by Billy Murdoch
I first became aware of Lee when I read the credits on the old Duane Eddy 78 rmp records.
I later saw him in a movie with Patrick Magee about southern moonshiners(early 70's)

Although many people in the U.K. will not recognise him.I for one will certainly say he will be greatly missed.
Billy

Posted: 6 Aug 2007 10:27 pm
by Dayna Wills
I was trying to think of the song that Lee and N
Nancy Sinatra did that had the name Faydra in it. I was at a Brams (sp) ice cream parlor in Tulsa and the girl behind the counter was named Faydra. I asked if she was named after the song and she said yes. I figured by her age that her mom was an old hippie, HA!

Posted: 7 Aug 2007 12:37 am
by nick allen
Dayna, that was "Some Velvet Morning".
Some velvet morning when I'm straight
I'm gonna open up your gate
And maybe tell you about Phaedra...
Nick

Posted: 7 Aug 2007 1:47 am
by Billy Wilson
Didn't he write "Jackson". The one made famous by Johnny and June? What is the first line of that song?

Posted: 7 Aug 2007 2:16 am
by Mark Eaton
"We got married in a fever!"

Not written by Lee, but he did a version with Nancy Sinatra.

I believe the song was actually written by Jerry Leiber and someone else (not his famous partner, Stoller).

Posted: 7 Aug 2007 4:43 am
by Eric West
Summer Wine was my fave. I was just remembering that song, and what I was doing in 63-4.

I don't know if he wrote it or not, but it was a NS duet.

EJL

Posted: 7 Aug 2007 7:10 am
by Kevin Macneil Brown
Those Nancy and Lee duets were such amazing records, quite original--and very cinematic-- in their production. I always liked the way Lee's records kept, amidst all the baroque strings and horns and slightly surreal sonics, a twangy desert-cowboy vibe.

Posted: 7 Aug 2007 7:11 am
by Kevin Macneil Brown
Those Nancy and Lee duets were such amazing records, quite original--and very cinematic-- in their production. I always liked the way Lee's records kept, amidst all the baroque strings and horns and slightly surreal sonics, a twangy desert-cowboy vibe.

Posted: 7 Aug 2007 7:52 am
by Walter Stettner
I think "Jackson" was written by Billy Edd Wheeler...

Kind Regards, Walter

Posted: 7 Aug 2007 9:04 am
by Mark Eaton
More than you ever wanted to know about the song - and Walter - we're both right:
Jackson (song)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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"Jackson" is a song written by Jerry Leiber and Billy Edd Wheeler about a married couple who find that the "fire" has gone out of their relationship. The song relates the desire of the husband and wife to travel to Jackson, Mississippi, where they each look forward to a new life free of the unhappy relationship.

Gaby Rodgers is frequently cited as co-author of "Jackson", but this is not true; Leiber wrote the song with Wheeler, using his then-wife's name as a pseudonym.

Johnny Cash and June Carter won a Grammy Award in 1968 for their recording of the song. Johnny Cash also sang it with Miss Piggy when he appeared on The Muppet Show. The song was performed by Joaquin Phoenix and Reese Witherspoon (playing Johnny Cash and June Carter) in the 2005 film Walk the Line.

Nancy Sinatra and Lee Hazlewood also recorded a version of the song that charted at #14 in 1967.

Ann Wilson, lead singer of Heart, recorded a cover version of this song for her 2007 solo release Hope & Glory with singer/songwriter k.d. lang.

Jenny Morris and INXS also recorded a version in 1992.

Country music parodist Cledus T. Judd recorded a parody called "Jackson (Alan That Is)" on his 1996 album I Stoled This Record. The parody deals with a man who is frustrated over his wife's obsession with Alan Jackson; the parody also includes snippets from Alan's 1994 song "Chattahoochee".

Posted: 7 Aug 2007 11:18 am
by Walter Stettner
Thanks for the info, Mark! :)

Kind Regards, Walter

Posted: 7 Aug 2007 9:47 pm
by Chris L. Christensen
The Kingston Trio had what is most likely the first recorded version of "Jackson", and a very good version at that, and it was included on their "Sunnyside" album released I believe in the Spring of 1963.

Posted: 8 Aug 2007 9:24 am
by Mark Eaton
Good knowledge, Chris. You should submit that info to Wikipedia.

Posted: 8 Aug 2007 10:39 am
by Janice Brooks
Speaking of Billy Ed Wheeler he was just inducted as part of the first group to the West Virginia Music Hall of Fame.
Other inductees include Little Jimmy Dickens, Hazel Dickens,Molly O Day Bill Withers and Blind Alfred Reed.

Posted: 8 Aug 2007 11:00 am
by Mark Eaton
More "good knowledge!" :)