The Complete Sun Recordings

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Total Tracks: 25   Total Length: 60:14

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John Morthland

eMusic Contributor

John Morthland has been writing about music since the days of electronically rechanneled stereo and duophonic sound. His name has darkened the mastheads of Roll...more »

04.22.11
Country and rockabilly, topped with a lonesome wail
Label: Sun Records

Especially in his high, crying voice, Smith was likely the finest pure country singer at Sun — but he was no slouch with rockabilly, either. That was evident from his very first single, which had a slightly restrained (for rockabilly) reading of Johnny Cash's "Rock ‘N 'Roll Ruby," with some snappy guitar work from Buddy Holobaugh, on the A-side and the first version of the lovely country ballad "I'd Rather Be Safe Than Sorry" on the flip. That single sold better than the first efforts of Elvis, Cash, Perkins and everyone else on Sun. He continued that approach with a second single pairing a Cash-like interpretation of the traditional "Black Jack David" with "Ubangi Stomp," a rockabilly romp the racial politics of which would today immediately ruin the career of anyone who sang it. His third single backed the country-pop "So Long I'm Gone" — with the steadfast Jimmy Wilson on piano and Al Hopson on guitar — with the wild "Miss Froggie," featuring Hopson's jumpy guitar breaks.

Somehow, though, Smith never recaptured the momentum of his debut single, despite such worthy efforts as a remake of Slim Harpo's "Got Love If You Want It" (retitled "I've Got Love" here), with… read more »

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A Big Byte For This Album

onenibble

Classic 50's Rock' N Roll' at it's best.

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Sun Records

By John Morthland, eMusic Contributor

Is there a more fabled label in all of rock 'n 'roll than Sun Records of Memphis, where Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, Johnny Cash, Carl Perkins, Roy Orbison and Charlie Rich got their starts? Alabama native Sam Phillips, a white man with an ear for black music in particular and a heart for black culture in general, opened the custom Memphis Recording Service in 1950, but by that summer was cutting commercial records for… more »