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Jimmie Rodgers - Make Me a Miracle (Greatest Hits of Jimmie Rodgers) (2022)

Jimmie Rodgers - Make Me a Miracle (Greatest Hits of Jimmie Rodgers) (2022)

BAND/ARTIST: Jimmie Rodgers

  • Title: Make Me a Miracle (Greatest Hits of Jimmie Rodgers)
  • Year Of Release: 2022
  • Label: Beach View Records
  • Genre: Country, Folk, Blues
  • Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 01:03:52
  • Total Size: 149 mb | 316 mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Jimmie Rodgers - Make Me a Miracle
02. Jimmie Rodgers - Oh Oh I'm Falling in Love Again
03. Jimmie Rodgers - Honeycomb
04. Jimmie Rodgers - The Long Hot Summer
05. Jimmie Rodgers - Secretly
06. Jimmie Rodgers - Their Hearts Were Full of Spring
07. Jimmie Rodgers - Are You Really Mine
08. Jimmie Rodgers - Wreck of the John B
09. Jimmie Rodgers - The Wizard
10. Jimmie Rodgers - Bimbombey
11. Jimmie Rodgers - Woman from Liberia
12. Jimmie Rodgers - Because You're Young
13. Jimmie Rodgers - Froggy Went a Courting
14. Jimmie Rodgers - I'm Never Gonna Tell
15. Jimmie Rodgers - Tucumcari
16. Jimmie Rodgers - Tlc (Tender Love and Care)
17. Jimmie Rodgers - Wonderful You
18. Jimmie Rodgers - Every Time My Heart Sings
19. Jimmie Rodgers - English Country Garden
20. Jimmie Rodgers - Just a Closer Walk with Thee
21. Jimmie Rodgers - I'm Going Home
22. Jimmie Rodgers - A Little Dog Cried
23. Jimmie Rodgers - Ring a Ling a Lario
24. Jimmie Rodgers - Wanderin' Eyes
25. Jimmie Rodgers - Waltzing Matilda

His brass plaque in the Country Music Hall of Fame reads, "Jimmie Rodgers' name stands foremost in the country music field as the man who started it all." This is a fair assessment. The "Singing Brakeman" and the "Mississippi Blue Yodeler," whose six-year career was cut short by tuberculosis, became the first nationally known star of country music and the direct influence of many later performers, from Hank Snow, Ernest Tubb, and Hank Williams to Lefty Frizzell and Merle Haggard. Rodgers sang about rounders and gamblers, bounders and ramblers and he knew what he sang about. At age 14 he went to work as a railroad brakeman, and on the rails he stayed until a pulmonary hemorrhage sidetracked him to the medicine show circuit in 1925. The years with the trains harmed his health but helped his music. In an era when Rodgers' contemporaries were singing only mountain and mountain/folk music, he fused hillbilly country, gospel, jazz, blues, pop, cowboy, and folk; and many of his best songs were his compositions, including "TB Blues," "Waiting for a Train," "Travelin' Blues," "Train Whistle Blues," and his 13 blue yodels. Although Rodgers wasn't the first to yodel on records, his style was distinct from all the others. His yodel wasn't merely sugar-coating on the song, it was as important as the lyric, mournful and plaintive or happy and carefree, depending on a song's emotional content. His instrumental accompaniment consisted sometimes of his guitar only, while at other times a full jazz band (horns and all) backed him up. Country fans could have asked for no better hero/star someone who thought what they thought, felt what they felt, and sang about the common person honestly and beautifully. In his last recording session, Rodgers was so ravaged by tuberculosis that a cot had to be set up in the studio, so he could rest before attempting that one song more. No wonder Rodgers remained beloved by generations of country music fans.


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  • User offline
  • nilesh65
  •  wrote in 16:37
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    • 0
Thank you so much for sharing!!
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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 01:48
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Many thanks.
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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 17:29
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Many thanks