| | Crusaders Those Southern Knights CD Crusaders Discography of CDs
(4 Customer Reviews)
Deep in their prime period, the Crusaders reaffirm their affinity with the groove and rely entirely upon all six of their funky selves for their material. "My Mama Told Me So" and "Feeling Funky" contain the most infectious outcropping of the ... Those Southern Knights Music Crusaders Those Southern Knights Songs Those Southern Knights Music Review Purchase Those Southern Knights CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Crusaders Chain Reaction CD (1975)
Those Southern Knights album
$8.09
| | Crusaders Southern Comfort CD (1974)
Those Southern Knights CD music
$8.09
| | Crusaders Scratch CD (1974)
Those Southern Knights music CDs
$8.95
| | Crusaders Free As The Wind CD (1976)
Those Southern Knights songs
$7.99
| | Crusaders Street Life CD (1979)
Those Southern Knights album
$8.75
| | Herbie Mann At The Village Gate CD (1961)
Those Southern Knights CD music
$10.45
| | Jason Marsalis Music In Motion CD (2000)
Those Southern Knights music CDs
$11.39
| | Earl Bullhead Keeper Of The Drum CD (1995)
Those Southern Knights songs
$13.25
| | Bruce Abbott Romancing The Sax CD (2001)
Those Southern Knights album
$13.29
| | Brand New Deja Entendu CD (2003)
Those Southern Knights CD music
$9.99
| | Naoya Takeda Takeda,Naoya Vol. 1-Crazy About Bebop! CD (2006) (Import)
Those Southern Knights music CDs
$44.69
| | Blaze Foley Wanted More Dead Than Alive CD (2007) Remastered
Those Southern Knights songs
$10.55 BLAZE FOLEY "WANTED; MORE DEAD THAN ALIVE" #1...songwriter of the year(F.A.R. charts) #1...album of the year(historic recording) #1...best in Industry (waddell hollow) #18..(euro americana charts) #2...(FAR charts)"The events leading up to the recording of, the recovery of and the eventual release of this CD, are truly stranger than fiction. I'll try to shed a little light on how after more then fifteen years of being lost, stolen, or destroyed; these songs of Blaze Foley's life have ended up on this CD. First, let me say that this is the absolutely truth as clearly as I can remember it. I met Blaze in 1983 over at Townes Van Zandt's house, where he was asleep on the couch when I arrived. When he woke up, he picked up his guitar and sang 'If I Could Only Fly'. I told him that I could fly and I was going to fly right down to the liquor store and buy us some vodka. From then on, I was lucky enough to call him my friend. We played together every time we could with my brother, David and many other friends and musicians. We played for the fun of the music, in any place that would let us. We didn't care about the money and hardly ever made any, but every now and then they would let us run a bar tab [mistake, mistake]. Fast forward about 6 years, to us sitting in the Austin Outhouse, a place we all had been thrown out of many times, but always gravitated back to. Blaze said that he really wanted to do a country album in a good studio, with us and other friends. So we made it happen. We had a good friend and lawyer, Peggy Underwood (who, by the way, kept us all out of jail), who really wanted to help Blaze with his career. She was very involved in Blaze's music and, contrary to what a lot of people say, did love and believe in him and was willing to financially support the project. We booked Bee Creek Recording Studio in Driftwood, Texas, run by bass player and engineer, Spencer Starnes. The core group for the project was my brother David, on bass, Joe Gracey on acoustic guitar, Charlie Day on steel guitar, Kimmie Rhodes on vocals and me on drums. We recorded the first day and got the 10 tracks that are here pretty much done. On the second day we cleaned up the tracks and had Kimmie record her vocals. We recorded these songs live, rather than over-dubbing the instruments one at a time. Everything was going great and we were getting ready to start the 3rd day, when it just fell apart. No more days were booked, no one got paid, and the money disappeared. No explanation was given to me, Blaze, or anybody else. Just like that, it was over. Luckily, some of us made copies of what we had done up until then. Then, over time, copies of copies were handed around to friends, until they too just disappeared. The master tapes on which all the music was on also were missing, supposedly burned up in a fire, and for 15 years we thought everything was lost or destroyed. Around the 4th of July in 2005, I got a call from an old friend of mine, Mel Pouch, who has been living up north for years. He said he was listening to an old CD that he had found on the dashboard of his car. Mel said he thought it was the songs David and I did with Blaze at Bee Creek. I could not believe my ears, and asked him to send it to me ASAP. Two days later, it showed up at my ...
| | D-51 Brand New World CD (2006) (Import)
$20.99 | | Curtis Mayfield Soul Legend CD (2007)
Those Southern Knights album
$30.39
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