As half of the Nashville duo Foster & Lloyd, Radney Foster blended the sounds of the Byrds and the Everly Brothers into lightweight country-pop tunes. On the solo Del Rio, TX 1959, Foster wades out into the deeper currents of country tradition and fishes out a Texas-swing honky-tonk album so good it could have come from George Strait. The title refers to the time and place of Foster's birth; it was a year when Texan George Jones topped the country charts with "White Lightning." When Foster tells a departing lover, "Don't say goodbye, just slam the door," the twangy kiss-off recalls the unvarnished frankness of Jones's heyday. --Geoffrey Himes
Del Rio, Texas, 1959,Radney Foster,Arista,Contemporary Country,Country,Country & Western,New Traditionalist,Pop
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Del Rio, Texas, 1959
Radney Foster Manufacturer: Arista ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000002VMT Release Date: 1992-09-29 |
Tracks:
- Just Call Me Lonesome
- Don't Say Goodbye
- Easier Said Than Done
- A Fine Line
- Went For A Ride
- Nobody Wins
- Louisiana Blue
- Closing Time
- Hammer And Nails
- Old Silver
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As half of the Nashville duo Foster & Lloyd, Radney Foster blended the sounds of the Byrds and the Everly Brothers into lightweight country-pop tunes. On the solo Del Rio, TX 1959, Foster wades out into the deeper currents of country tradition and fishes out a Texas-swing honky-tonk album so good it could have come from George Strait. The title refers to the time and place of Foster's birth; it was a year when Texan George Jones topped the country charts with "White Lightning." When Foster tells a departing lover, "Don't say goodbye, just slam the door," the twangy kiss-off recalls the unvarnished frankness of Jones's heyday. --Geoffrey HimesCustomer Reviews:
COUNTRY PERFECTION.......2005-09-22
An Essential Album For Any Real Country Fan.......2005-09-17
Radney Foster is heads and tails over ninety-five percent of today's country stars. This album, "Del Rio, TX 1959," released in the early 90's, is proof enough of that. Lest we forget Foster's contributions to "Foster & Lloyd" and all of his other albums, old and new. Songs like "Just Call Me Lonesome," "Louisiana Blue," and "Hammer and Nails" scream true country. The slower tracks here, especially "Easier Said Than Done" remind folks of what makes a real country song. Also, unlike many of the plastic stars of today, Foster either wrote or had a hand in writing every song on this disc. And with contributions from solid artists like Kim Richey and George Ducas, Foster lays down a set of tracks that'll make any Texas country fan proud.
Foster belongs in the same group of respected Texas and Tex-influenced songwriters and performers such as Rodney Crowell, Jerry Jeff Walker and Robert Earl Keen. He's pure and intelligent country. That's a rare thing these days, and we need more artists like him.
Higlhly recommended.
If I could only own one CD . . ........2004-01-01
All that and a bag of pork rinds.......2003-07-29
But dad-gum there are times when you just have to stick the Miles Davis and Alan Hovhaness back in the jewel case and drive the ol' Chrysler with the windows down across the Panhandle. And when those times come, this is the cd you need to be listening to.
Foster is Country and Western's answer to Marshall Crenshaw. He cannot write a bad tune. He cannot write an unclever phrase. But alas, he also cannot get the publicity he so richly deserves.
The pictures he paints in his songs makes you actually concerned about the people who live 6 miles from I-40 on FM1643. They make you hope things turn out for them. They make you want to call your grandfather and talk about the wheat crop. They make you want to go just out of town and hear "the lonesome sound of diesels winding up the grade".
I will probably never become a fan of country music. But if country turns more like Foster's work, I may indeed buy me a hat and some snakeskins.
Fine Line in Between Good and Great.......2002-07-03
Here, every track is solid, particularly the country radio hits as well the stunning closing tune, "Old Silver." Throughout this record, it's hard to figure out how Foster isn't being begged in Nashville to repeat this magic. And as anyone who's seen him live can attest, Radney's no fluke, proving in his live show his voice, talent, and songwriting are as strong as anyone's going. Let's hope his recent problems with his manager are easily laid to rest, allowing him to crank out a new record a year.
A flat out great country record.
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