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Various Artists - That'll Flat Git It!vol. 23 (Columbia) (1959)

Track listing:
  1. You're So Right For Me Ronnie Self 2:05
  2. Hot Rod The Collins Kids 1:50
  3. Respectfully Miss Brooks Marty Robbins 3:01
  4. I'm Gonna Roll And Rock Eddie Zack 2:12
  5. Little Forty Ford Leon Smith 1:43
  6. Rompin' Stompin' Boogie Jay Cee Hill 1:59
  7. Goodbye Lonesome, Hello Baby Doll Johnny Horton 2:20
  8. High Voltage Bobby Lord 2:03
  9. Well, Don't You Know Billy Crash Craddock 2:45
  10. Flip Out Billy Brown 2:30
  11. A Love So Fine Jay Cee Hill 2:28
  12. Big Deal The Skee Brothers 2:03
  13. Rhythm Hall Chuck Murphy 2:18
  14. Leavin' On My Mind Billy Walker 2:21
  15. Rockin' Down The Mississippi Jimmy Boyd 2:21
  16. She's Gone Jay Cee Hill 2:25
  17. Big Blon Baby Ronnie Self 1:48
  18. Move A Little Closer The Collins Kids 2:09
  19. Long Gone Lonesome Blues Marty Robbins 2:32
  20. Susie's House John, D. Loudermilk 2:02
  21. Bump! Jay Cee Hill 2:01
  22. Cherokee Boogie Johnny Horton 2:28
  23. What A Line Carl Story 2:16
  24. Boom Boom Baby Billy Crash Craddock 2:31
  25. Meet Me In The Alley Sally Billy Brown 2:06
  26. Since My Baby Left Me Jay Cee Hill 2:17
  27. That's All She Wrote The Skee Brothers 2:10
  28. Mercy The Collins Kids 2:03
  29. Teenage Wedding Mel Tillis 2:04
  30. Crazy Mixed Up Blues-Jimmy Boyd 1:57

Notes


It's been widely reported that Mitch Miller, Columbia Records' pop music chief in the '50s, was no friend of rock & roll, but thankfully the folks at the label's Nashville offices (in particular producer Don Law) had a higher hip factor, and this installment in Bear Family's ongoing That'll Flat Git It! series unearths thirty quality rockabilly and rockin' country sides from Columbia's vaults. Ronnie Self's feral "You're So Right for Me" kicks things off in frantic style, and while that's easily the wildest side here, there's plenty more solid rock action, including Self's "Big Blon' Baby," three numbers from the Collins Kids, Billy Brown's "Flip Out" and "Meet Me in the Alley Sally," Bobby Lord's "High Voltage" and the hilarious "Bump!" from Jay Cee Hill. Bear Family have also included some up-tempo hillbilly action here, including a pair of outstanding Johnny Horton cuts, two from Marty Robbins, Carl Story's defiant "What a Line" and Mel Tillis' rare stab at the rockin' stuff, "Teenage Wedding." The set also features the rollicking "Susie's House" from John D. Loudermilk, who would later become a top songwriter, and "Boom Boom Baby" and "Well, Don't You Know" from Billy "Crash" Craddock, who would bring rockabilly back to radio many years later. As usual, Bear Family has done a superb job of remastering this music, and the liner notes from Colin Escott are top-notch. Great music that should tickle the eardrums of anyone with a taste for early rock & roll.