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1. I've Got Five Dollars and It's Saturday Night
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2. Wreck on the Highway
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3. Sweeter Than the Flowers
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4. One Has My Name
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5. I'm a Fool to Care
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6. Don't Rob Another Man's Castle
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7. My Shoes Keep Walking Back to You
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8. I've Got a New Heartache
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9. Big Job
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10. That's All It Took
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11. Mockin' Bird Hill
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12. As Long as I Live
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13. Y'All Come
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14. Someday You'll Want Me to Want You
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15. Louisiana Man
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16. Your Old Standby
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17. Why Baby Why
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The Complete '60s Duets,George Jones,Gene Pitney,The Jordanaires,Varese Records,Country,Country-Pop,Pop,Traditional Country
Average customer rating:
- George Jones & Gene Pitney = A Brilliant Pairing
- This is Different
- Unusual duet pairing works well
- An odd combination, but somehow it works...!
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The Complete '60s Duets
George Jones , Gene Pitney , and The Jordanaires
Manufacturer: Varese Sarabande
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| Country
| Styles
| Music
General
| Traditional Country
| Country
| Styles
| Music
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ASIN: B0007XBMWK
Release Date: 2005-03-29 |
Tracks:
- I've Got Five Dollars and It's Saturday Night
- Wreck on the Highway
- Sweeter Than the Flowers
- One Has My Name
- I'm a Fool to Care
- Don't Rob Another Man's Castle
- My Shoes Keep Walking Back to You
- I've Got a New Heartache
- Big Job
- That's All It Took
- Mockin' Bird Hill
- As Long as I Live
- Y'All Come
- Someday You'll Want Me to Want You
- Louisiana Man
- Your Old Standby
- Why Baby Why
Customer Reviews:
George Jones & Gene Pitney = A Brilliant Pairing.......2006-11-08
Well, I've done this all wrong. I have given sort of a review I guess in commenting on "JESS JESS"'s review. So my diatribe is gotten to by clicking on COMMENT 1 at the end of his review.
To be brief, I loved it back in the 60's and I love it now. It sounded so different from anything we'd ever heard where I come from, and it was just great to hear someone singing with one of our favorites. But, you know, that was in a totally different world and time. We Southerners/hillbilly/country lovers were laughed at and made fun of back then. But we didn't care, we still loved our hillbilly/country music. We appreciated and treasured things like that. It sounded great in those days. Even on our scratchy records. I didn't pass up listening to any of the songs. I played the whole thing over and over. I'm just glad to be able to hear it again on the CD I purchased through Amazon.
This is Different.......2005-11-26
Well, I'm a big fan of George Jones, but the jury's still out on Gene Pitney (he's got a voice that I will never be comfortable with). Not sure of who thought up this duo, but it's not anything I could've thought of in a million years. But, somehow, George Jones makes it work. While this duet will never be confused with Waylon & Willie, or Moe & Joe, it is entertaining nonetheless...........kind of like a wreck on the highway; you dont want to look, but you find yourself doing so anyway. If you're a real George Jones fan, you'll want to include this one in your collection, but Gene Pitney's voice is just so grating and out-of-place, that I doubt you'll have this CD in your regular rotation. One listen to "I've got a New Heartache" and you'll agree.
Unusual duet pairing works well.......2005-06-13
Jones has probably had stranger singing partners in his lengthy career, but on its surface, this pairing with 1960s pop star Gene Pitney ("It Hurts to Be in Love" "Town Without Pity") seems to be one of the oddest. Even more surprising is how effectively Pitney lent himself to country material, and how well his tenor blended with and complimented Jones. Brought together in 1965 by Musicor, their then-shared record label, they recorded this fetching collection of ballad and up-tempo covers with many of Nashville's studio regulars, including The Jordanaires.
Highlights include a rousing version of the Faron Young hit "I've Got Five Dollars and It's Saturday Night," the hillbilly harmonies of "Y'all Come," and an Everly Brothers styled duet on Moon Mullican's late-40s ballad "Sweeter than the Flowers." Pitney didn't so much mimic Jones' style as he mediated his own pop tendencies in providing support for the country legend's phrasings and bends. Varese's disc pulls together all 17 tracks recorded by the duo, comprising a minor chapter in each star's chart lives, but a unique and surprisingly worthwhile corner of their musical careers.
An odd combination, but somehow it works...!.......2005-05-20
Amid all the business wrangling and horse trading that went on during the history of the Musicor label, which was intertwined with United Artists in the early '60s and then went indie mid-decade, poor ol' George Jones was batted about like like a ping-pong ball in a typhoon. In 1965, he was moved decisively over to the Musicor label, and one of his first projects was a duets album with cricket-voiced teen idol Gene Pitney, who was then the hottest act on the label. It seemed an unlikely pairing, but it produced two albums, both cut the same year, "George Jones And Gene Pitney" and "It's Country Time Again," each of which produced some moderate chart action, and led to a third LP of hillbilly material by Pitney, "The Country Side Of Gene Pitney." This CD gathers all the duets off those albums (and leaves out several solo vocal numbers, which can be heard on a more comprehensive Jones-Pitney collection on Bear Family). Although a few songs, like the novelty-tinged version of "Mockingbird Hill," sank to the kitschy depths many naysayers predicted, other tracks have surprising resonance and grit. It's hard to shake Pitney's image as a chirpy, melodramatic teenpop crooner, but after a while, his country side seems fairly plausible: after all, he sounds quite a bit like Hank Locklin in his youth, so what's to get riled up about, really? This is clearly not Jones' best work -- Pitney overshadows him on all but a few tracks -- but this disc is still worth picking up, particularly if you're a George Jones fan already.
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