The Light Crust Doughboys-3 Cd

| The Light Crust Doughboys-3 Cd |
| The Light Crust Doughboys-LONE STAR STATE SWING (2003) (320kbps) |
| | 01 - Won't You Wait Another Year.mp3 | 6.59 Mb | | 02 - Oh! Susannah.mp3 | 6.28 Mb | | 03 - The Budding Rose.mp3 | 6.32 Mb | | 04 - Five Long Years.mp3 | 6.01 Mb | | 05 - Alice Blue Gown.mp3 | 5.83 Mb | | 06 - Too Late.mp3 | 6.26 Mb | | 07 - My Buddy.mp3 | 6.53 Mb | | 08 - Lost.mp3 | 6.44 Mb | | 09 - This Life Is Hard To Understand.mp3 | 5.89 Mb | | 10 - The Wheel Of The Wagon Is Broken.mp3 | 6.27 Mb | | 11 - Marinita.mp3 | 6.00 Mb | | 12 - Careless.mp3 | 5.89 Mb | | The Light Crust Doughboys - Lone Star State Swing - front x.jpg | 48 Kb |
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| OKeh 05227 Light Crust Doughboys - Horsie, Keep Your Tail Up!.mp3 | 2.69 Mb |
| OKeh 05227 Light Crust Doughboys - Truck Driver's Blues.mp3 | 2.24 Mb |
| OKeh 05653 Light Crust Doughboys - Cripple Creek.mp3 | 2.33 Mb |
| OKeh 05653 Light Crust Doughboys - I Want a Feller.mp3 | 2.49 Mb |
| OKeh 05968 Light Crust Doughboys - I Had Someone Else Before I Had You.mp3 | 2.37 Mb |
| OKeh 05968 Light Crust Doughboys - My Gal's With My Pal Tonight.mp3 | 2.38 Mb |
| OKeh 06216 Light Crust Doughboys - Don't Lie To An Innocent Maiden.mp3 | 2.45 Mb |
| OKeh 06216 Light Crust Doughboys - Honky Tonk Shuffle.mp3 | 2.40 Mb |
| OKeh 06286 Light Crust Doughboys - Five Long Years.mp3 | 2.31 Mb |
| OKeh 06286 Light Crust Doughboys - Won't You Wait Another Year.mp3 | 2.54 Mb |
| OKeh 06349 Light Crust Doughboys - Bear Creek Hop.mp3 | 2.40 Mb |
| OKeh 06349 Light Crust Doughboys - I Want a Waitress.mp3 | 2.49 Mb |
| Vocalion 03345 The Light Crust Doughboys - Happy Cowboy.mp3 | 2.32 Mb |
| Vocalion 03345 The Light Crust Doughboys - Oh! Susanna.mp3 | 2.41 Mb |
| Vocalion 03867 The Light Crust Doughboys - Dusky Stevedore.mp3 | 2.39 Mb |
| Vocalion 03867 The Light Crust Doughboys - Roll Along, Jordan.mp3 | 2.16 Mb |
| Vocalion 04560 Light Crust Doughboys - Gin Mill Blues.mp3 | 2.30 Mb |
| Vocalion 04560 Light Crust Doughboys - Pussy, Pussy, Pussy.mp3 | 2.12 Mb |
| Vocalion 04973 Light Crust Doughboys - Mama Won't Let Me.mp3 | 2.26 Mb |
| Vocalion 04973 Light Crust Doughboys - We Must Have Beer.mp3 | 2.33 Mb |
| Vocalion 05120 Light Crust Doughboys - I'll Keep On Loving You.mp3 | 2.41 Mb |
| Vocalion 05120 Light Crust Doughboys - Little Rubber Dolly.mp3 | 2.44 Mb |
| Vocalion 05201 Light Crust Doughboys - Beer Drinkin' Mama.mp3 | 2.46 Mb |
| Vocalion 05201 Light Crust Doughboys - Oh Baby Blues.mp3 | 2.24 Mb |
Description
LIGHT CRUST DOUGHBOYS. The Light Crust Doughboys, founded in 1931, have had the greatest and longest success of all the western swing bands in the Fort Worth-Dallas area. The group's history covers more than three quarters of a century. In 1929 James Robert (Bob) Wills moved from West Texas to Fort Worth and formed the Wills Fiddle Band, a rather unimposing aggregation made up of Wills as fiddler and Herman Arnspiger as guitarist. In 1930 Milton Brownqv joined the band as vocalist, and in 1931 the Wills Fiddle Band—Wills, Arnspiger, and Brown—became the Light Crust Doughboys.
With help from friends and fans in Fort Worth, Wills persuaded Burrus Mill and Elevator Company to sponsor the band on a radio show by advertising the mill's Light Crust Flour. After two weeks of broadcasts, W. Lee O'Daniel, president of Burrus Mill, canceled the show because he did not like "their hillbilly music." However, a compromise, inspired by Wills's persistence and the demands of thousands of fans who used Light Crust Flour, brought the group back to the air in return for its members' agreement to work in the mill as well as perform. People listened at noon each day for a couple of licks on Bob Wills's fiddle and Truett Kimsey's enthusiastic introduction: "The Light Crust Doughboys are on the air!" Then the Doughboys sang their theme song, which began: "Listen everybody, from near and far if you wanta know who we are. We're the Light Crust Doughboys from Burrus Mill." This went over so well that it became the permanent salutation of the Doughboys.
So impressed was O'Daniel with the band's following that he became the announcer for the show and organized a network of radio stations that broadcast the Doughboys throughout Texas and most of Oklahoma. The Texas Quality Group Network, formed in 1934, included such radio stations as WBAP, Fort Worth; WFAA, Dallas; WOAI, San Antonio; KPRC, Houston; and KOMA, Oklahoma City. The show became one of the most popular radio programs in the Southwest.
In 1932 the original Doughboys began leaving the band. Brown left the show that year to form the Musical Brownies, and in 1933 O'Daniel had to fire Wills for missing broadcasts, especially because of drinking. In 1933 Wills organized the Playboys in Waco. Of all the early Doughboys, Wills was the most influential. The Light Crust Doughboys never departed from the fiddle–band style that Wills established in the band's formative years.
In October 1933 O'Daniel took a new and talented group of Doughboys to Chicago for a recording session with Vocalion (later Columbia) Records. O'Daniel, who deserves much credit along with Brown and Wills for the initial success of the Doughboys, continued as manager and announcer until the mid–thirties. In 1935, when Burrus Mill fired him after a series of disputes, O'Daniel formed his own band, the Hillbilly Boys, and his own flour company, Hillbilly Flour. O'Daniel used this band in his successful bid for the governorship in 1938.
The years between 1935 and World War II were the most successful in the long history of the Doughboys. By 1937 some of the best musicians in the history of western swing had joined the band. Kenneth Pitts and Clifford Gross played fiddles. The rhythm section consisted of Dick Reinhart, guitar; Marvin (Smokey) Montgomeryqv, tenor banjo; Ramon DeArman, bass; and John (Knocky) Parker, piano. Muryel Campbell played lead guitar. At various times Cecil Brower played fiddle. Almost from the beginning, the Light Crust Doughboys enjoyed a successful recording career; their records outsold those of all other fiddle bands in the Fort Worth–Dallas area. Their popularity on radio had much to do with their success in recording. By the 1940s the Light Crust Doughboys broadcast over 170 radio stations in the South and Southwest. There is no way of knowing how many millions of people heard their broadcasts. Though the Doughboys played good, danceable jazz, the band was basically a show band whose purpose was to entertain. Their shows took the listeners' minds off the economic problems of the thirties and added joy to their lives.
In the early months of World War II members of the band went into either the armed forces or war–related industries. In 1942 Burrus Mill ended the Doughboys' radio show. The mill reorganized the band in 1946, but the broadcasts were never as appealing as they had been in the prewar years. The company tried various experiments and even hired Hank Thompson and Slim Whitman in the hope that somehow the radio show could be saved. By 1950 the age of television had begun, however, and the dominance of radio was over.
With its passing went the radio show that Texans had enjoyed since 1931. The Light Crust Doughboys were no longer "on the air." But the group's demise was only apparent, for in the 1960s the Doughboys' music was revived. In 1973 members of the band took part in the last recording session for Bob Wills in Dallas for the album For the Last Time. During the following decades leader Smokey Montgomery continued to keep the band going in some form. In the late 1980s the Light Crust Doughboys were the first inductees into the Texas Western Swing Hall of Fame. Throughout the 1990s the Doughboys continued to bring their music to new audiences. Art Greenhaw joined the group; as co-producer he added horns to their sound in 1993, thus bringing about a new type of "country jazz," influenced by the old swing sound. The Texas legislature declared the Doughboys the "official music ambassadors of the Lone Star State" in 1995.
The band received some national recognition when one of their 1930s jukebox classics, "Pussycat, Pussycat, Pussycat," written by Montgomery, was featured in the movie Striptease in 1996. By the late 1990s the Doughboys were also recording gospel music with James Blackwood on Greenhaw's independent record label, based in Dallas. Beginning in 1998 the group performed jointly with the Lone Star Ballet in Amarillo, the Fort Worth Symphony, the Dallas Wind Symphony, the Abilene Philharmonic, and other ensembles. They were inducted into the Rockabilly Hall of Fame in 2000 and continued to release material including the CD Doughboy Rock (2000).
After Montgomery's death in 2001, the Light Crust Doughboys played a fitting tribute at his funeral, held in the Hall of State in Dallas. Art Greenhaw became the band's leader and producer. The history of the Light Crust Doughboys was chronicled by John Dempsey in his book The Light Crust Doughboys Are on the Air: Celebrating Seventy Years of Texas Music, published in 2002. In 2003 the band won a Grammy for their work on the CD We Called Him Mr. Gospel Music: The James Blackwood Tribute Album.
The Light Crust Doughboys, under the leadership of Art Greenhaw, remained very active in the 2000s. Their collaborative work on Southern Meets Soul: An American Gospel Jubilee (2005) earned a Grammy nomination for Best Southern, Country or Bluegrass Album. In December 2005 the Light Crust Doughboys Hall of Fame and Museum officially opened in Quitman. The facility displayed exhibits of historic memorabilia of the group as well as hosted live performances. The Light Crust Doughboys were inducted into the Texas Radio Hall of Fame in 2006. The following year their release, Light Crust Doughboys 1936–1941, received enthusiastic reviews from western swing fans.
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