Customer Rating:      Summary: Sixteen Tons of Fun Comment: Not only do you get Sixteen Tons but there is also Shotgun Boogie and the Ballad of Davey Crockett. No wonder Mr. Ford was popular during the golden age of pop singers, the 1950's because as this CD shows his songs were fun and there is a feeling of joy in his voice.
Customer Rating:      Summary: tennessee ernie ford greatest hits Comment: This was a gift for my brother-in-law and he was very surprised when I gave it to him for his birthday. He loved it!
Customer Rating:      Summary: TEF CD Comment: Tennessee Ernie Ford was a great man and had a great voice. We are thoroughly enjoying his CD.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Bless His Little Pea-Pickin' Heart Comment: One reviewer stops just short of calling Ernie Ford a "hick" and questions the appeal of the songs represented in this little album, claiming to have never heard of them. Well, let's look at the facts.
Yes he did sell millions of gospel/hymn LPs and EPs over the years and, for that reason, to many people whose musical tastes don't go beyond that genre this is the type of music for which he is best remembered. But the reality is, Ernie Ford appealed to a wide spectrum of musical preferences and that is born out by the fact that he also put 29 selections onto the Country singles charts, and 21 onto the pop charts between 1949 and 1976.
And here you get all three of his # 1 hits - Mule Train which reached # 1 Country [4 weeks at that spot] and # 9 Pop in 1949, the hilarious Shotgun Boogie which stayed at # 1 Country for FOURTEEN weeks in late 1950/early 1951 and reached # 14 Pop, and Sixteen Tons, TEN weeks at # 1 Country and EIGHT weeks at # 1 Billboard Pop Top 100 in 1955. The Cry Of The Wild Goose just missed the # 1 Country slot in 1950, settling for a # 2 as well as # 15 Pop. Not bad for a "hick" and, to boot, these will be recalled by many, if not that one reviewer.
The other seven selections here didn't fare too badly either. His version of The Ballad of Davy Crockett [there were several that year] made the Top 10 in both Country and Top 100 in 1955, and In the Middle Of An Island reached # 23 Top 100 in late summer 1957 with its flipside, Ivy League, registering as a "follow along" hit. Then there was the comical warning not to take the Bible too lightly in That's All, which made it to # 12 Country and # 17 Top 100 in March 1956, The Rovin' Gambler, a # 60 Top 100 that May, and First Born which topped out at # 46 Top 100 in December.
The Jack Fascinato orchestra backed him on all the hits in this package with the exception of tracks 2 (here he was back by the Cliffie Stone orchestra), 4, 6, and 7. To the reviewer who wondered about "One Suit" that was the flipside of another 2-sided hit for Capitol, 1957's The Watermelon Song [# 87 Top 100] and One Suit [# 93]. These are among the hardest to find of Ernie's Pop hits, along with the B-side to Sixteen Tons, "You Don't Have To Be A Baby To Cry" which reached # 78.
As I have mentioned in other reviews [Beach Boys, Young-Holt Unlimited], this EMI-Capitol 10 Best Series is one of the best such compilations to hit the market in the early days of CDs as all tracks are original hits and with excellent sound quality. The only drawback is the complete lack of liner notes.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Memories of Westerns Past Comment: This is a great recording which contains at least five of TEF's best western songs.
I've always love western music. My favorites are Marty Robbins, Frankie Laine, TEF, and Tex Ritter.
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