Among reissue and archival labels, only Bear Family Records could get to Volume 14 of a series and not have purchasers begin to feel like the concept was getting milked a bit, along with their wallets. This particular collection, indeed, will prove nothing less than essential for fans of rockabilly or early rock & roll, as well as devotees of Sun Records, though the reasons may be a little more complicated than the title of this volume suggests at first glance. "Rockabilly from the Vaults of Sun Records" might prove ...
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Among reissue and archival labels, only Bear Family Records could get to Volume 14 of a series and not have purchasers begin to feel like the concept was getting milked a bit, along with their wallets. This particular collection, indeed, will prove nothing less than essential for fans of rockabilly or early rock & roll, as well as devotees of Sun Records, though the reasons may be a little more complicated than the title of this volume suggests at first glance. "Rockabilly from the Vaults of Sun Records" might prove deceptively unappealing to the casual purchaser, as there is no shortage of rockabilly sides from Sun Records to choose from on CD, and from perfectly respectable reissue labels apart fromBear Family -- but this 31-song CD is very different from those. And the key can be found in the wording -- the music is "from" the vaults of Sun Records, but much of it was never actually issued by the label. Rather, the songs here mostly represent material found in the Sun vaults that Sam Phillips never released, and demos by people who he never signed, for whatever reasons. So what we have is truly an alternate universe of artists and sounds, in the context of Sun -- people and music that mostly never made the cut but which, in theory, might have. And some should have -- Glenn Honeycutt, whose "Rock All Night" opens this CD, was obviously a serious talent with at least one song to match; and Dick Penner, who co-wrote "Ooby Dooby," very obviously had something more than enthusiasm and energy to offer, as proved by "Move Baby, Move." Jumpin' Gene Simmons is substantially less impressive here with "Pop and Mama," but Jimmy Haggett's "Rock Me Baby" could easily have charted in 1955 or 1956. Jimmy Wages' "Take Me (Garden of Evil)" is downright bizarre, a river of words and strangely contradictory sentiments running like rapids -- rapids that Wages barely traverses safely in his frantic tempo and accompaniment. Smokey Joe Baugh's "Hula Bop," by contrast, is rockabilly with a smooth country element -- though those tom-toms over the break run counter to the almost elegant steel guitar, and his raspy reading of the last verse and the honky tonk piano on the second break is a great surprise. Based on "Drive In," Mack Vickery could have been Sun's successor to Carl Perkins after the latter left the label, but it wasn't to be -- nor were most of Vickery's later opportunities to pan out. Not everyone represented here was exactly comfortable with rock & roll, much less rockabilly -- Roger Fakes was clearly more of a balladeer, than a rock & roll balladeer, based on "Somehow We'll Find a Way," but it's still worth hearing what he had to say. And then there's Kenny Parchman, whose contracts were signed, releases scheduled, and. . . nothing -- except that "Treat Me Right," even in 2009, comes off like a rockabilly classic, with the personality, the hooks, and the beat to put it over. Not quite so "Christine" by Roy Hall, mentor to Jerry Lee Lewis and co-author of "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On," which is fun but no classic. Ken Cook's "Problem Child," by contrast, is a lost hit -- a pounding, driving rendition of the Roy Orbison tune. And Curley Money's "Chain Gang Charlie" is worth the price of admission, a pounding piece of rock & roll that should have ruled the airwaves in 1956. And that brings us to Andy Anderson and the Rolling Stones -- no, not Brian, Mick, Keith, et al, but Joe Tubb (lead guitar), Billy Covington (bass), and Bobby Lyon (drums). "Tough Tough Tough" never made it onto Sun, but it should have, as tight and powerful a record as they would ever have issued this side of Elvis' work. The whole CD is like peering into a lost side of history and seeing more than a few undeservedly forgotten talents -- not just Elvis Presley wannabes, but a few should-have-beens as well. As with most Bear Family releases, the sound is impeccable -- especially given that none of this material was ever supposed to see the light of day in the form...
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Add this copy of That'Ll Flat Git It, Vol. 14 to cart. $18.17, new condition, Sold by Importcds rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Sunrise, FL, UNITED STATES, published 1997.