George Jones - A Picture Of Me (Without You) (1972) & Nothing Ever Hurt Me (Half As Bad As Losing You) (1973/2009)
1 CD | EAC rip | FLAC (tracks + cue + log) | Scans Included | 335 MB
Genre: Country | Label: AMERICAN BEAT
With no biographical material needed for the iconic George Jones, let s get right to the music: 'A Picture Of Me (Without You)' is quite simply a George Jones masterpiece! Working with producer Billy Sherrill for the first time, Jones found the perfect foil to his now-famous hard honky tonk soul, Sherrill didn t try to tame Jones, but just lasso him in enough to make beautiful music. With many of the finest Nashville songwriters contributing songs, this five-star release (All Music Guide) is called by many the perfect George Jones album. Not to be outdone by its predecessor, Nothing 'Ever Hurt Me (Half As Bad As You)' (Jones second album with producer Billy Sherrill) picks up right where 'A Picture Of Me' left off and never looks back. Another five-star album (All Music Guide), Jones also scored a pair of Top 10 hits with this release (the title track and 'What MyWoman Can t Do'). This is George Jones at his best, and it's on American Beat Records!
Revew :By the early 1970s, George Jones had through lived enough personal and professional experience for several mere mortals. He'd been discovered by producer Pappy Daily, broke as a hardcore honky-tonker in the mid-50s, graduated into a compelling balladeer by decade's end, notched solo and duet classics throughout the `60s, developed a drinking habit that begat his "No Show Jones" nickname, divorce his second wife to marry Tammy Wynette (with whom he launched a successful string of duet releases), and left Daily behind when he signed with Epic in 1971. Epic teamed Jones with legendary countrypolitan producer Billy Sherrill, and after the optimistic, love-soaked George Jones (We Can Make It), the duo dug into this superb pair of albums.
1972's A Picture of Me (Without You) finds Jones and Sherrill getting more comfortable with one another. Sherrill's influence dominates the backgrounds with tight arrangements, measured tempos, smoothing touches of piano and strings, and backing vocals by the Jordanaires. There's a good helping of pedal steel, but it's Jones' voice that turns Sherrill's productions from a sticky trap into winning contrast. Jones sounds remarkably comfortable throughout these sessions, singing with the ease with which others merely speak. He'd recorded (and would again record) more pyrotechnically astonishing performances, but singing songs that reflected his troubled marriage, he connected at a basic human level with his material.
1973's Nothing Ever Hurt Me stretches in two directions, with Sherrill's arrangements a shade slicker and Jones' vocals a notch rawer. Even the ballads, like Don Gibson's "Made for the Blues," are sung in a straight country tone, without any sort of croon. Sherrill uses acoustic guitars to add a folksy edge to the layers of strings. Thematically, things seem to have been going better in the Jones-Wynette household, as the album features several love songs, and drinking only figures into the closer, "Wine (You've Used Me Long Enough)." Then again, the drinking song was a Jones-Wynette co-write, so who knows? As on the previous album, there are numerous individual highlights, including a solemn cover of Lefty Frizzell's "Mom and Dad's" waltz that gives Jones a chance to dig into his lower notes.
Given the huge amount of material Jones recorded for Musicor (before hopping to Epic) throughout the `60s, it's a wonder that he had anything left to give. The opportunity to slow down, pick and write songs, and work through arrangements with a strong-willed but sympathetic producer seems to have tapped into yet another reservoir of artistry. Jones has released nearly a hundred albums over the course of fifty years, but most were showcases for hit singles and filler; few were as solid as this pair. Though a greatest hits package is a good place to get a broader look, this two-fer is a terrific introduction to the basic elements of Jones' artistry.
TRACKLISTA Picture Of Me (Without You) (1972)1. A Picture of Me (Without You)
2. The Man Worth Lovin' You
3. She Knows What She's Crying About
4. Second Handed Flower
5. That Singing Friend of Mine
6. She Loves Me (Right Out of Mind)
7. Tomorrow Never Comes
8. Another Way To Say Goodbye
9. On the Back Row
10. Let There Be a Woman
11. We Found a Match
Nothing Ever Hurt Me (Half As Bad As Losing You) (1973)12. Nothing Ever Hurt Me (Half As Bad As Losing You)
13. You're Looking At a Happy Man
14. Never Having You
15. Made For the Blues
16. What's Your Mama's Name
17. Mom and Dad's Waltz
18. You'll Never Grow Old (To Me)
19. What My Woman Can't Do
20. My Loving Wife
21. Love Lives Again
22. Wine (You've Used Me Long Enough)
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