Hank Williams

The Complete Hank Williams

Hank Williams

225 TITRES • 9 HEURES ET 24 MINUTES • SEP 22 1998

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1
2
Never Again (Will I Knock On Your Door)
02:40
3
Wealth Won't Save Your Soul
02:45
4
When God Comes And Gathers His Jewels
02:48
5
I Don't Care (If Tomorrow Never Comes)
02:47
6
My Love For You (Has Turned To Hate)
02:40
7
Honky Tonkin'
02:46
8
Pan American
02:48
9
Move It On Over
02:43
10
11
(Last Night) I Heard You Crying In Your Sleep
02:42
12
Six More Miles (To The Graveyard)
02:45
13
Fly Trouble
02:42
14
I'm Satisfied With You
02:33
15
On The Banks Of The Old Pontchartrain
02:52
16
17
I Can't Get You Off Of My Mind
02:50
18
I'm A Long Gone Daddy
02:50
19
20
My Sweet Love Ain't Around
02:42
21
The Blues Come Around
02:42
22
Mansion On The Hill
02:34
23
I'll Be A Bachelor Til I Die
02:36
24
There'll Be No Teardrops Tonight (Single Version)
02:47
25
Lovesick Blues (Single Version)
02:43
26
Lost On The River
02:34
27
I Heard My Mother Praying For Me
02:34
28
Lost Highway
02:41
29
May You Never Be Alone (Single Version)
02:49
30
31
Jesus Remembered Me
02:52
32
Honky Tonk Blues (1949 Version)
02:39
33
Mind Your Own Business
02:54
34
You're Gonna Change (Or I'm Gonna Leave) (Single Version)
02:56
35
My Son Calls Another Man Daddy (Polydor Single Version)
02:34
36
37
I've Just Told Mama Goodbye
02:55
38
I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry (Single Version)
02:46
39
A House Without Love
02:53
40
I Just Don't Like This Kind Of Living (Single Version)
02:48
41
My Bucket's Got A Hole In It (Demo Version)
02:04
42
My Bucket's Got A Hole In It
02:32
43
Long Gone Lonesome Blues (Single Version)
02:37
44
Why Don't You Love Me (Single Version)
02:24
45
Why Should We Try Anymore (Single Version)
02:37
46
My Son Calls Another Man Daddy (MGM Single Version)
02:33
47
Too Many Parties And Too Many Pals
02:58
48
Beyond The Sunset
02:59
49
The Funeral
03:05
50
Everything's Okay
02:50
51
They'll Never Take Her Love From Me
02:45
52
Nobody's Lonesome For Me (Single Version)
02:31
53
54
Help Me Understand
02:56
55
No, No Joe
02:26
56
Cold, Cold Heart
02:43
57
Dear John
02:35
58
Just Waitin'
02:39
59
Men With Broken Hearts
03:10
60
I Can't Help It (If I'm Still In Love With You)
02:23
61
Howlin' At The Moon
02:42
62
Hey, Good Lookin'
02:54
63
My Heart Would Know
02:25
64
The Pale Horse And His Rider
02:52
65
A Home In Heaven (Single Version)
02:29
66
67
Pictures From Life's Other Side
02:51
68
I've Been Down That Road Before
02:56
69
I Dreamed About Mama Last Night
03:00
70
I'd Still Want You (With Yodel)
02:58
71
(I Heard That) Lonesome Whistle
02:25
72
73
74
I'd Still Want You (Single Version)
02:36
75
Baby We're Really In Love
02:33
76
I'm Sorry For You My Friend
02:42
77
Honky Tonk Blues
02:11
78
Let's Turn Back The Years
02:22
79
Window Shopping
02:32
80
Jambalaya (On The Bayou)
02:52
81
Settin' The Woods On Fire
02:36
82
I'll Never Get Out Of This World Alive
02:26
83
You Win Again
02:36
84
I Won't Be Home No More
02:44
85
Be Careful Of Stones That You Throw
02:58
86
Please Make Up Your Mind
02:49
87
I Could Never Be Ashamed Of You
02:45
88
Your Cheatin' Heart
02:42
89
Kaw-Liga
02:34
90
Take These Chains From My Heart
02:37
91
Happy Rovin' Cowboy
02:36
92
Freight Train Blues
01:17
93
San Antonio Rose
02:09
94
I'm Not Coming Home Anymore
02:53
95
I Ain't Gonna Love You Anymore
01:29
96
Won't You Sometimes Think Of Me
01:53
97
Why Should I Cry
01:48
98
I Watched My Dream World Crumble Like Clay
01:45
99
I Told A Lie To My Heart
02:16
100
Mother Is Gone
02:26
101
In My Dreams You Still Belong To Me
02:20
102
We're Getting Closer To The Grave Each Day
02:37
103
(I'm) Going Home
01:25
104
Calling You
01:54
105
Pan American (1946 Single Version)
02:02
106
Wealth Won't Save Your Soul (Montgomery Radio Performance)
02:28
107
Honky Tonk Blues (Non-Session Demo)
01:57
108
A Home In Heaven
02:05
109
You Broke Your Own Heart
02:04
110
I'm So Tired Of It All
02:22
111
You Caused It All By Telling Lies
01:37
112
Faded Love And Winter Roses
01:58
113
Please Don't Let Me Love You
02:15
114
There's No Room In My Heart For The Blues
02:15
115
I Wish I Had A Nickel
01:43
116
The Waltz Of The Wind
02:07
117
At The First Fall Of Snow
03:11
118
Leave Me Alone With The Blues
02:17
119
I'm Free At Last
02:21
120
Blue Love (In My Heart)
02:04
121
It Just Don't Matter Now
02:27
122
Little Paper Boy
03:02
123
Someday You'll Call My Name
02:12
124
The Battle Of Armageddon
02:28
125
No One Will Ever Know
02:16
126
With Tears In My Eyes
02:13
127
128
Rock My Cradle (Once Again)
03:03
129
Don't Do It Darling
01:51
130
Rockin' Chair Money
02:05
131
Cool Water
03:44
132
Tennessee Border
01:52
133
First Year Blues
02:25
134
My Main Trial Is Yet To Come
01:56
135
Wait For The Light To Shine
02:40
136
We Live In Two Different Worlds
01:57
137
Roly Poly
02:00
138
Swing Wide Your Gate Of Love
02:21
139
Dixie Cannonball
02:23
140
Sundown And Sorrow
01:21
141
The Devil's Train
02:58
142
The Old Home
02:41
143
Alone And Forsaken (Single Version)
01:59
144
Heaven Holds All My Treasures
02:28
145
Lost On The River (Edit)
02:17
146
147
148
Dear Brother [feat. Kitty Wells & Johnnie R. Wright]
02:27
149
'Neath A Cold Gray Tomb Of Stone
02:41
150
Time Has Proven I Was Wrong [feat. Curley Williams]
01:16
151
No Not Now [feat. Curley Williams]
02:10
152
When You're Tired Of Breaking Others' Hearts
01:08
153
Honey, Do You Love Me, Huh
01:15
154
California Zephyr
01:56
155
Your Cheatin' Heart (Demo Version)
02:32
156
You Better Keep It On Your Mind
02:21
157
How Can You Refuse Him Now
02:36
158
159
Ten Little Numbers
01:16
160
Thy Burdens Are Greater Than Mine
03:28
161
Last Night I Dreamed Of Heaven
01:21
162
I Ain't Got Nothin' But Time
02:40
163
Message To My Mother
04:03
164
Fool About You
01:23
165
I'm Going Home
01:52
166
Jambalaya (On The Bayou) (Demo Version)
01:51
167
Ready To Go Home
01:48
168
Kaw-Liga (Demo With 2 False Starts)
02:54
169
I Could Never Be Ashamed Of You
02:19
170
171
All The Love I Ever Had (1990 Original Singles Version)
01:46
172
We're Getting Closer To The Grave Each Day (Single Version)
02:07
173
The Log Train
02:20
174
How To Write Folk And Western Music To Sell [feat. Grant Turner]
01:57
175
There's A Tear In My Beer
02:47
176
The Alabama Waltz
01:05
177
Jesus Died For Me
02:27
178
A Teardrop On A Rose (Demo Version)
02:28
179
Jesus Is Calling (Undubbed Version)
01:37
180
Wearin' Out Your Walkin' Shoes
01:36
181
When The Book Of Life Is Read
01:24
182
There's Nothing As Sweet As My Baby
01:59
183
184
I Can't Escape From You (Undubbed Session Demo)
02:16
185
Weary Blues From Waitin' (Non-Session Demo / Undubbed)
02:27
186
Are You Walkin' And A Talkin' For The Lord (Undubbed Version)
02:43
187
If You'll Be A Baby To Me
00:57
188
'Neath A Cold Gray Tomb Of Stone (Demo Version)
02:50
189
Lost Highway (The "Farmer Jim" Tapes)
04:03
190
I'm A Long Gone Daddy (The "Farmer Jim" Tapes)
05:40
191
Long Gone Lonesome Blues (The "Farmer Jim" Tapes)
03:27
192
Help Me Understand (The March Of Dimes Show)
07:03
193
When God Dips His Love In My Heart (The March Of Dimes Show (Single Version))
02:23
194
They'll Never Take Her Love From Me (Rare Radio Performance)
04:34
195
Are You Walkin' And A Talkin' For The Lord (Rare Radio Performance)
02:15
196
Honky Tonkin' (Radio Performance)
02:13
197
I Cried Again (Rare Radio Performance)
03:12
198
Wild Side Of Life (Rare Radio Performance)
02:54
199
Something Got A Hold Of Me (Rare Radio Performance) [feat. Audrey Williams]
02:29
200
Drifting Too Far From Shore (Rare Radio Performance)
03:13
201
Lovesick Blues (Live At The Grand Ole Opry/1949)
03:12
202
Move It On Over (Live)
02:52
203
You're Gonna Change (Or I'm Gonna Leave) (Live At The Grand Ole Opry/1949)
02:47
204
I Just Don't Like This Kind Of Livin' (Live At The AFRS Show #116/1950)
03:27
205
Talk With Minnie Pearl
02:57
206
They'll Never Take Her Love From Me (Live At The Grand Ole Opry/1950)
01:34
207
Long Gone Lonesome Blues (The AFRS Shows)
03:31
208
Why Don't You Love Me (The AFRS Shows)
01:43
209
Talk With Minnie Pearl (The AFRS Shows)
03:37
210
Moanin' The Blues (The AFRS Shows (Single Version))
03:19
211
Nobody's Lonesome For Me (The AFRS Shows)
02:30
212
Dear John (Live At The Grand Ole Opry/1951)
02:08
213
Hey Good Lookin' (Live At The Grand Ole Opry/1951)
02:46
214
Honky Tonk Blues (Live At The Grand Ole Opry/1952)
01:54
215
Let The Spirit Descend (Live At The Grand Ole Opry/1952)
02:05
216
Cold Cold Heart (The AFRS Shows)
02:32
217
Baby, We're Really In Love (Live At The Grand Ole Opry/1952)
01:36
218
The Old Country Church (The AFRS Shows (Single Version)) [feat. "Little" Jimmie Dickens]
02:36
219
A Tramp On The Street (The Health And Happiness Show)
03:49
220
I'll Have A New Body (I'll Have A New Life) (The Health And Happiness Show)
02:26
221
I Want To Live And Love (The Health And Happiness Shows)
02:26
222
Where The Soul Of Man Never Dies (The Health And Happiness Shows) [feat. Audrey Williams]
01:49
223
The Prodigal Son (The Health And Happiness Show)
02:58
224
I Can't Help It (If I'm Still In Love With You) (The Kate Smith Evening Hour) [feat. Anita Carter]
01:57
225
The Apology #2 (Spoken Word)
02:50
℗ This Compilation 1998 UMG Recordings, Inc. © 1998 UMG Recordings, Inc.

Biographie de l’artiste

The father of contemporary country music, Hank Williams was a superstar by the age of 25; he died at the age of 29. In those four short years, he established the rules for all the country performers who followed him and, in the process, much of popular music. Hank wrote a body of songs that became popular classics, and his direct, emotional lyrics and vocals became the standard for most popular performers.

Hiram King Williams was born in Mount Olive, Alabama, on September 17, 1923. When he was eight years old, he was given a guitar by his mother. His musical education was provided by a local blues street singer, Rufus Payne, who was called Tee Tot. From Tee Tot, Williams learned how to play the guitar and sing the blues, which would come to provide a strong undercurrent in his songwriting. Williams began performing around the Georgiana and Greenville areas of Alabama in his early teens. His mother moved the family to Montgomery, AL, in 1937, where she opened a boarding house. In Montgomery, he formed a band called the Drifting Cowboys and landed a regular spot on a local radio station, WSFA, in 1941. During his shows, Williams would sing songs from his idol, Roy Acuff, as well as several other country hits of the day. WSFA dubbed him "the Singing Kid" and Williams stayed with the station for the rest of the decade.

Williams met Audrey Mae Sheppard, a farm girl from Banks, Alabama, in 1943 while he was playing a medicine show. The following year, the couple married and moved into Lilly's boarding house. Audrey became Williams' manager just before the marriage. By 1946, he was a local celebrity, but he was unable to make much headway nationally. That year, Hank and Audrey visited Nashville with the intent of meeting songwriter/music publisher Fred Rose, one of the heads of Acuff-Rose Publishing. Rose liked Williams' songs and asked him to record two sessions for Sterling Records, which resulted in two singles. Both of the singles -- "Never Again" in December 1946 and "Honky Tonkin'" in February 1947 -- were successful and Williams signed a contract with MGM Records early in 1947. Rose became the singer's manager and record producer.

"Move It on Over," released later in 1947, became Hank's first single for MGM. It was an immediate hit, climbing into the country Top Five. By the summer of 1948, he had joined The Louisiana Hayride, appearing both on its tours and radio programs. "Honky Tonkin'" was released in 1948, followed by "I'm a Long Gone Daddy." While neither song was as successful as "Move It on Over," they were popular, with the latter peaking in the Top Ten. Early in 1949, he recorded "Lovesick Blues," a Tin Pan Alley song initially recorded by Emmett Miller and made popular by Rex Griffin. The single became a huge hit upon its release in the spring of 1949, staying at number one for 16 weeks and crossing over into the pop Top 25. Williams sang the song at the Grand Ole Opry, where he performed an unprecedented six encores. He had become a star.

Hank and Audrey Williams had their first child, Randall Hank, in the spring of 1949. Also in the spring, Hank assembled the most famous edition of the Drifting Cowboys, featuring guitarist Bob McNett, bassist Hillous Butrum, fiddler Jerry Rivers, and steel guitarist Don Helms. Soon, he and the band were earning $1,000 per concert while selling out shows across the country. Williams had no fewer than seven hits in 1949 after the success of "Lovesick Blues," including the Top Five smashes "Wedding Bells," "Mind Your Own Business," "You're Gonna Change (Or I'm Gonna Leave)," and "My Bucket's Got a Hole in It." A string of additional singles followed in 1950, including the number one hits "Long Gone Lonesome Blues," "Why Don't You Love Me," and "Moanin' the Blues," as well as the Top Ten hits "I Just Don't Like This Kind of Livin'," "My Son Calls Another Man Daddy," "They'll Never Take Her Love From Me," "Why Should We Try," and "Nobody's Lonesome for Me." That same year, Williams began recording a series of spiritual records under the name Luke the Drifter.

Williams continued to rack up hits in 1951, beginning with the Top Ten hit "Dear John" and its number one flip side, "Cold, Cold Heart." That same year, pop vocalist Tony Bennett recorded his own version of "Cold, Cold Heart" to popular acclaim, leading to a stream of covers from such mainstream artists as Jo Stafford, Guy Mitchell, Frankie Laine, Teresa Brewer, and several others. Williams had also begun to experience the fruits of crossover success, appearing on the Perry Como television show and joining a package tour that also featured Bob Hope, Jack Benny, and Minny Pearl. In addition to "Dear John" and "Cold, Cold Heart," Williams had several other hits in 1951, including the number one song "Hey, Good Lookin'" and "Howlin' at the Moon," "I Can't Help It (If I'm Still in Love with You)," "Crazy Heart," "Lonesome Whistle," and "Baby, We're Really in Love," which all charted in the Top Ten.

Though his professional career was soaring, Hank's personal life was beginning to spin out of control. He had suffered a mild drinking problem before becoming a star, but it had been more or less controlled during his first few years of fame. However, as he began to earn large amounts of money and spend long times away from home, he began to drink frequently. Furthermore, Hank's marriage to Audrey was deteriorating. Not only were they fighting, resulting in occasional separations, but Audrey was trying to create her own recording career without any success. In the fall of 1951, Hank was on a hunting trip on his Tennessee farm when he tripped and fell, re-activating a dormant back injury. Williams began taking morphine and other painkillers for his back and quickly became addicted.

In January of 1952, Hank and Audrey separated for a final time and he headed back to Montgomery to live with his mother. The move had little effect on his music career, however, with "Honky Tonk Blues" peaking at number two during the spring. In fact, he released five additional singles in 1952 -- "Half as Much," "Jambalaya," "Settin' the Woods on Fire," "You Win Again," and "I'll Never Get Out of This World Alive" -- all of which charted in the Top Ten. In spite of such success, Hank turned completely reckless in 1952, spending nearly all of his waking hours drunk and taking drugs. He also frequently destroyed property and played with guns.

Williams left his mother in early spring, moving in with Ray Price in Nashville. In May, Audrey and Hank were officially divorced. She was awarded the house and their child, as well as half of his future royalties. Williams continued to play a large number of concerts, but he was always drunk during the show, and he sometimes missed the gig altogether. In August, the Grand Ole Opry fired Williams for that very reason, explaining that he could return once he was sober. Instead of heeding the Opry's warning, the singer just sank deeper into his self-destructive behavior. Soon, his friends were leaving him, as the Drifting Cowboys began working with Price and Fred Rose no longer supported him. Williams was still playing The Louisiana Hayride, but he was performing with local pickup bands and began earning reduced wages. That fall, he met Billie Jean Jones Eshlimar, the 19-year-old daughter of a Louisiana policeman. By October, they were married. Hank also signed an agreement to support the baby -- who had yet to be delivered -- of one of his other girlfriends, Bobbie Jett, in October. By the end of the year, Williams was having heart problems and Toby Marshall, a con man doctor, was giving him various prescription drugs to help soothe the pain.

Hank was scheduled to play a concert in Canton, OH, on January 1, 1953. He was scheduled to fly out of Knoxville, TN, on New Year's Eve, but the weather was so bad that he had to hire a chauffeur to drive him to Ohio in his new Cadillac. Before they left for Ohio, Williams was injected with two shots of vitamin B-12 and morphine by a doctor. Williams got into the backseat of the Cadillac (allegedly with a bottle of whiskey), and the teenage chauffeur headed out for Canton. When the driver was stopped for speeding, the policeman noticed that Hank looked like a dead man. Williams was taken to a West Virginia hospital and he was officially declared dead at 7:00 a.m. on January 1, 1953. He had died in the back of the Cadillac, on his way to a concert. Ironically, the last single released in his lifetime was "I'll Never Get Out of This World Alive."

Hank was buried in Montgomery, AL, three days later. His funeral drew a record crowd, larger than any crowd since Jefferson Davis was inaugurated as the President of the Confederacy in 1861. Dozens of country music stars attended, as did Audrey Williams, Billie Jean Jones, and Bobbie Jett, who happened to give birth to a daughter three days later. "I'll Never Get Out of This World Alive" reached number one immediately after his death, and it was followed by a number of hit records throughout 1953, including the number ones "Your Cheatin' Heart," "Kaw-Liga," and "Take These Chains From My Heart."

After his death, MGM wanted to keep issuing Williams records, so they took some of his original demos and overdubbed bands onto the original recording. The first of these, "Weary Blues from Waitin'," was a hit, but the others weren't quite as successful. In 1961, Hank was one of the first inductees to the Country Music Hall of Fame. Throughout the '60s, Williams' records were released in overdubbed versions featuring heavy strings, as well as reprocessed stereo. For years, these bastardized versions were the only records in print, and only in the '80s, when his music was released on compact disc, was his catalog restored to its original form. Even during those years when only overdubbed versions of his hits existed, Williams' impact never diminished. His songs have become classics, his recordings have stood the test of time, and his life story is legendary. It's easy to see why Hank Williams is considered by many as the defining figure of country music. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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