12 String Guitar! | ||||
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Studio album by The Folkswingers | ||||
Released | 1963 | |||
Recorded | 24, 25, 27 May 1963 | |||
Studio | World Pacific Studio, Los Angeles, California | |||
Genre | Folk | |||
Label | World Pacific | |||
Producer | Jim Dickson | |||
The Folkswingers chronology | ||||
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12 String Guitar! is an instrumental folk album released by the Folkswingers in 1963. The Folkswingers were a studio band with constantly changing personnel. On this album, they are comprised of are Glen Campbell on 12-string guitar and the Dillards.
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "If I Had a Hammer" | Lee Hays, Pete Seeger | 2:43 |
2. | "Black Mountain Rag" | Traditional | 2:23 |
3. | "Walk Right In" | Gus Cannon, Hosea Woods | 1:54 |
4. | "Wildwood Flower" | A.P. Carter | 2:12 |
5. | "Blowin' in the Wind" | Bob Dylan | |
6. | "Midnight Special" | Jim Scott | 2:10 |
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Cottonfields" | Traditional | 2:26 |
2. | "Columbus Stockade Blues" | Jimmie Davis, Eva Sargent | 2:21 |
3. | "Rye Whiskey" | Wils Carter | 2:18 |
4. | "Bull Durham" | Glen Campbell | 1:53 |
5. | "Wabash Cannonball" | John E. Graham | 2:09 |
6. | "Dark as a Dungeon" | Merle Travis | 2:57 |
7. | "This Train" | Traditional | 2:25 |
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [1] |
Chart | Entry date | Peak position | No. of weeks |
---|---|---|---|
Billboard 200 | 1963 | 132 | ? |
"Dance, Dance, Dance" is a song by the American rock band the Beach Boys from their 1965 album Beach Boys Today!. Written by Brian Wilson, Carl Wilson, and Mike Love, it was first issued as a single in October 1964, backed with "The Warmth of the Sun". "Dance, Dance, Dance" marked Carl's first recognized writing contribution to a Beach Boys single, his contribution being the song's primary guitar riff and solo.
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The Astounding 12-String Guitar of Glen Campbell is the third album by American singer-guitarist Glen Campbell, recorded in stereo and released in 1964 by Capitol Records. The album is entirely instrumental, with the exception of one cut: "Walkin' Down the Line", on which Campbell also sings.
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James Dickson was born in Los Angeles, California, son of a diesel engineer in the United States Navy. He was an avid sailor as a teenager, and enlisted in the United States Army in 1946 before he embarked on a career in the recording industry as a self-taught record producer and band manager. Before producing the first Elektra Records Bluegrass records he produced his first record, an LP on his own label, Vaya. He eventually sold the rights of Lord Buckley's 1955 album Hipsters, Flipsters and Finger Poppin' Daddies, Knock Me Your Lobes to Elektra and it was in print for another 25 years. Jim Dickson was the lone individual behind Elektra Records Los Angeles Bluegrass albums. In 1962 he produced his first bluegrass record for Elektra called Dian and the Greenbriar Boys by the Greenbriar Boys and a Hollywood country singer, Dian James. While working on the collaboration between Greenbriar Boys and Dian James, Dickson discovered the Dillards and with the help of Ralph Rinzler convinced Elektra Records that they were a good Bluegrass group. He went on to produce three of their records, 1963's Back Porch Bluegrass, 1964's Live!!!! Almost!!! and 1965's Pickin' and Fiddlin' which featured fiddler, Byron Berline. Rosenberg notes that Pickin' and Fiddlin' "was unlike any previous bluegrass album; it was an LP of old-time fiddle music played to bluegrass backing." Dickson was behind the first ever recording of a Bob Dylan song by a bluegrass band, The Dillards recording of Bob Dylan's "Walkin' Down the Line" on their 1964 album Live!!!! Almost!!!
I Am Love is the seventh studio album by American recording artist Peabo Bryson, released in 1981 under Capitol Records. The album features singles, "There's No Guarantee" and the top ten R&B hit, "Let the Feeling Flow".
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Raga Rock is an album credited to "the Folkswingers featuring Harihar Rao", who was a Los Angeles-based Indian classical musician and ethnomusicologist. The album was released in June 1966 on the World Pacific record label. The title refers to the raga rock trend in popular music, as artists such as the Beatles, the Byrds, the Rolling Stones and the Yardbirds had all begun incorporating Indian influences into their recent work. Led by the sitar playing of Rao, a longtime associate of Ravi Shankar, the album contains instrumental versions of several of these contemporary songs, including "Norwegian Wood", "Eight Miles High" and "Paint It Black". Other members of the Folkswingers for this release included jazz musicians such as Herb Ellis and Dennis Budimir, and members of the Los Angeles pool of session musicians known as the Wrecking Crew.