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George Jones

   

George Jones will be headlining the UTV Country Fest in Dungannon Park Co.Tyrone. on Saturday 2nd + Sunday 3rd August 2008.

 

He is also playing on;

 

 

Tickets are on sale with Ticketmaster

 

George Jones is one of the greatest of Americian honky tonk singers, but he has also been a victim of its lifestyle. He learned guitar in his youth, and in 1947, was hired by the husband-and-wife duo Eddie And Pearl. This developed into his own radio program and a fellow disc jockey, noting his close-set eyes and upturned nose, nicknamed him "The Possum."

 

There’s only a short list of names nominated when the familiar barroom or living-room debate over “Who’s the best country singer there’s ever been?” comes up. The man who’s so often the winner continues to headline over a hundred live dates a year (after more than 50 years of recording), still sounds like no one else at all, and, to this day, always makes time for regular appearances at the Opry. As you know, he’s called “The Possum.”

For his singularly expressive delivery of every syllable of some of country music’s great heartbreaking ballads, and his rousing attack on those grin-making novelty change-ups, George Jones has been justly honored.

Inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1992, he was awarded the Academy of Country Music’s Pioneer Award that same year. In 2002, he was awarded the National Medal of Arts, the nation’s highest honor for artistic excellence, in a ceremony at the White House.


People who keep track of numbers say that George has charted more singles in his extraordinary career, than any other artist in any music format. As the 2004 compilation George Jones: Fifty Years of Hits made plain in its three CDs, he had hit records in every decade of the second half of the 20th century. Now that’s popularity that’s lasted!

Born in southeast Texas near Beaumont, the eighth child in a poor family, George was introduced to music by his mother, a church pianist, and his truck-driver/pipefitter father, who played guitar. He was singing at age 9, playing guitar at 11, writing his songs at 12 – and had a regular spot on a
Jasper, Texas, radio station by 15.

The first of his long list of hits was the nearrockabilly “Why, Baby, Why” recorded at Starday Records in 1955. Two years later, he moved to Mercury, where he recorded “White Lightnin’,” (his fi rst No. 1), and such enduring classics as “The Window Up
Above,” “She Th inks I Still Care,” “The Race Is On,” and “Walk Through This World With Me.”

In the tumultuous years in which George was married to Tammy Wynette, and they both recorded with Billy Sherrill at Epic Records, their perfect duets included “Golden Ring,” “We’re Gonna Hold On,” and “Two Story House.” George’s own new hits there included “Th e Grand Tour,” “The
Door”—and in 1980, the indelible “He Stopped Loving Her Today.” From “Who’s Gonna Fill Their Shoes” to “Choices” on 1999’s Grammy-winning 1999 Cold Hard Truth album and beyond, great George Jones records have not stopped arriving.


Some signature hits: He Stopped Loving Her Today; White Lightning; Window Up Above; She Thinks I Still Care; The Grand Tour; Why, Baby, Why; A Picture of Me Without You; Good Year For The Roses; The Race Is On, Who’s Gonna Fill Their Shoes and Choices.


Through every twist and turn in country music fashion, his pre-eminent gifts have remained clear. In recent years, George has become a successful seller of everything from sausage to that family-friendly drink called “water,” but he’s never “sold” anybody a song. He’s lived in them.

 

Jones still headlines nearly 100 concerts a year. He turns 74 on September 12, 2005 and his talent continues to amaze as he ages like fine wine. At long last, Jones seems comfortable in his own voice. HITS I MISSED probably features the most relaxed, confident vocals ever heard on Jones and his soulful, easy approach to these classics make them his own.

 

(Many thanks to websites worldwide for this information)

 

www.georgejones.com              mp3 sample - To Cold at Home.

 
 

George Jones


HITS I MISSED…AND ONE I DIDN’T George Jones' latest album featuring songs that passed by George on their way to becoming hits. Now George is putting his touch on these classics, plus updating a hit he didn't miss.

 

Originally conceived as “songs I wished I had recorded,” Jones recorded eleven songs that included many he had passed on over the years that
went on to became hits for other people. The one hit he didn’t miss is the first new version of “He Stopped Loving Her Today” in 25 years.

Includes his first ever duet/video with Dolly Parton on the Hank Williams, Jr. penned “The Blues Man.” This song chronicles the life of a singer who “started drinkin’, took some things that messed up his thinkin’ … got cuffed on dirt roads, got sued over no shows” not unlike Jones himself.

Jones had resisted rerecording “He Stopped Loving Her Today” for 25 years because he believed that the version he and Billy Sherrill created could never be topped. It has consistently been voted the “greatest country song of all time” and the hit will always be the definitive version. Now, not looking to top the original but instead to offer another interpretation: a starker, more mature take that forsakes strings for steel and Jones’ mournful delivery is slower and almost sadder. Jones would only trust Keith Stegall, whom he has often referred to as a “little Billy Sherrill” to touch his signature song.