Loved that man.
End of one very special era - Charlie Louvin has died.
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Lateralthinking1
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Paul Sherratt
Well THE stand out was of the great man timing a song ( for that evening's performance ) ... on our settee.
Circumstances had come about where an all-time hero and someone who you could only imagine would ever be an image on an LP
sleeve was actually staying at our house ..
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Lateralthinking1
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Paul Sherratt
It was, Lat.
And I can always play quite a bit, owning every recording The Louvin Brothers ever released.
And Spotify has got a huge amount too ...
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Originally posted by Paul Sherratt View PostLoved that man.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OcMmC1EkxK8
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Paul Sherratt
John,
Charlie was a real trooper - in contrast to the chap who was singing with him who I don't think had left his home state before ...
He released his latest album just last November ! And that collection is one of my indulgences too - I've got the box set so all I need now is
the desert island. Loads of Louvins on Spotty have you noticed ?
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According to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
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Paul Sherratt
Thanks John.
Google tells me The Telegraph had one too. And that nice Gideon Coe played our favourite track ...
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Lateralthinking1
I have had a few thoughts about Charlie Louvin since his death. Perhaps it doesn't do him justice to over-analyse. However, I feel a little dunce-like in terms of his career and would find it helpful to have some steers.
One, the Everly Brothers. They were largely before my time, certainly before my memory of music, although I am familiar with their main work. To my hearing, there is actually quite a gap between the backgrounds and styles of the Louvins and the Everlys. What is the best way of understanding that connection? Was it quite a direct evolution that was more comprehensible at the time?
Two, Gram Parsons. For me, this is the country music artist of the early seventies who stands out for being leftfield. Charlie is said to have been an influence and I have even seen some comparisons made between him and "Living With War" era Neil Young. Meanwhile, he described himself as a bit of a redneck.
Listening to that final album, I find his patriotism difficult to read. It seems both staunch and questioning. Any pointers on this? Or i it best just to enjoy his music and understand it in the context of its time and place without worrying overly about, say, polemic?
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Martin Reynolds
Better late than never. From today's Independent:
Almost unchallenged, the Louvin Brothers were the greatest brother act in country music and several of their songs, "When I Stop Dreaming", "The Christian Life" and "Cash on the Barrelhead", have been recorded by contemporary acts. "Being brothers really helped our harmonies," Charlie Louvin told me on a UK tour in 1988, "but I doubt if you could think of one brother act that grew old together. It just don't work."
Incidentally Friday's show on The Cat will have a Balkan theme.
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