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RIP George Jones

Started by Fully, Apr 26, 2013, 10:31 AM

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Fully

http://youtu.be/1R2F9f2Cl6Y

From WSMV:

NASHVILLE, TN (WSMV) - Country music legend and Grand Ole Opry member George Jones died Friday at Vanderbilt Medical Center, according to Webster & Associates Public Relations & Marketing.MORE

       
  • Country singer George Jones dies at 81(RNN) – Country singer George Jones, who awed listeners with his ability to immerse himself in his songs and compelled them to do the same, has died. He was 81 years old.
    Jones was a revelation in the country music culture – equal parts vocal phenom and bad boy – whose drinking and impulsiveness made him just as legendary as his performances.
    Jones enjoyed his first No. 1 hit, White Lightning, in 1959 and had racked up 150 more chart-topping songs since then. He did it in duets and as a solo artist.
    He Stopped Loving Her Today was his most famous song and arguably the most famous country song of all time. The song reeked of sorrow and loss and a strong tinge of believability both because listeners could relate to it and because it was reflective of the singer's personal life.
    "If we all could sound the way we wanted, we'd all sound like George Jones," said singer Waylon Jennings in a tribute song to Jones.
    Praise like that came from people all over the entertainment spectrum, and Jones had the undying adoration of fans and contemporaries.
    Continue reading >>
  • Jones, 81, was hospitalized on April 18 with fever and irregular blood pressure.
    Born September 12, 1931, Jones is regarded among the most important and influential singers in American popular music history. He was the singer of enduring country music hits including "She Thinks I Still Care," "The Grand Tour," "Walk Through This World With Me," "Tender Years" and "He Stopped Loving Her Today," the latter of which is often at the top of industry lists of the greatest country music singles of all time.
    "A singer who can soar from a deep growl to dizzying heights, he is the undisputed successor of earlier natural geniuses such as Hank Williams and Lefty Frizzell," wrote Bob Allen in the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum's "Encyclopedia of Country Music."
    Jones was born in Saratoga, Texas, and he played on the streets of Beaumont for tips as a teenager. He served in the U.S. Marine Corps before returning to Texas and recording for the Starday label in Houston, Texas. In 1955, his "Why Baby Why" became his first Top 10 country single, peaking at number four and beginning a remarkable commercial string: Jones would ultimately record more than 160 charting singles, more than any other artist in any format in the history of popular music.

    Jones' first number one hit came in 1959 with "White Lightning," a Mercury Records single that topped Billboard country charts for five weeks. He moved on to United Artists and then to Musicor, notching hits including "She Thinks I Still Care," "The Race Is On," "A Good Year for the Roses" and "Walk Through This World With Me."

    Jones signed with Epic Records in 1971 and worked with producer Billy Sherrill to craft a sound at once elegant and rooted, scoring with "The Grand Tour," "Bartenders Blues" and many more. Sherrill also produced duets between Jones and his then-wife Tammy Wynette, and in the 1970s they scored top-charting hits including "We're Gonna Hold On," "Golden Ring" and "Near You."

    By the time "Golden Ring" and "Near You" hit in 1976, Jones and Wynette were divorced, and Jones was battling personal demons. His solo career cooled until 1980, when he recorded "He Stopped Loving Her Today," a ballad penned by Curly Putman and Bobby Braddock that helped Jones win Country Music Association prizes for best male vocal and top single. "He Stopped Loving Her Today" revived a flagging career, and Jones won the CMA's top male vocalist award in 1980 and 1981. He also earned a Grammy for best male country vocal performance.

    In 1983, Jones married the former Nancy Ford Sepulvado. The union, he repeatedly said, began his rehabilitation from drugs and alcohol and prolonged his life. He signed with MCA Records in 1990 and began a successful run, and he was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1992. His guest vocal on Patty Loveless' "You Don't Seem To Miss Me" won a CMA award for top vocal event in 1998, and it became his final Top 20 country hit.

    In 1999, Jones nearly died in a car wreck, but he recovered and resumed touring and recording. He remained a force in music until his death, playing hundreds of shows in the new century and collecting the nation's highest arts award, the Kennedy Center Honor for lifetime achievement, in 2008. In late 2012, Jones announced his farewell tour, which was to conclude with a sold-out, star-packed show at Nashville's Bridgestone Arena on November 22, 2013. Alan Jackson, Garth Brooks, Randy Travis, Charlie Daniels, Kenny Rogers, Sam Moore, The Oak Ridge Boys and many others were set to perform at Jones' Bridgestone show.

    Jones is survived by his loving wife of 30 years Nancy Jones, his sister Helen Scroggins, and by his children, grandchildren, nieces and nephews.


    On a personal note, my dad use to play poker with him and I was lucky enough to hear him sing back in 1998. Rest in Peace, George.


Penny Lane

I just started reading Tammy Wynette's biography last week.   :cry:

Drive-by Truckers: George Jones Cellphone Talkin' Blues

You were talkin' on that cellphone
Drivin' your Mercedes way too fast
All of a sudden there was just dialtone
You hit the pylons on the overpass
And your whole life passed before you
From the old days and the honky tonks
To that last shot of vodka
All them miles in between

George Jones
Better leave that cellphone alone
Don't be talkin' as you try to get back home
If you don't change your ways my friend
You'll be singing duets with Tammy again

Foot down heavy on the pedal
Talkin' to your daughter in the car
Next sound you heard was twisted metal
Another dead genius country star
Better get your shit together
Everythings been torn in two
Good thing your liver's made of leather
Or else we'd all be mourning the likes of you

George Jones
Better leave that cellphone alone
Don't be talkin' as you try to get back home
If you don't change your ways my friend
You'll be singing duets with Tammy again

And I heard it on the news
He almost stopped loving her today
Better stay on that riding lawnmower
If you're gonna keep on carrying on that way

George Jones
Better leave that cellphone alone
Don't be talkin as you try to get back home
If you don't change your ways my friend
George Jones
but come on...there's nothing sexy about poop. Nothing.  -bbill

Fully

Nice choice, Penny.

I regularly drive by the repair shop where this was filmed.

http://youtu.be/xTDLyD0vULQ

but this one I always enjoy:

http://youtu.be/owWNCNyEuYI

Hawkeye

Glad I got to see him in Nelsonville in 2011.  Will have to spin some George Jones LP's tonight...probably watch his performance on the Johnny Cash show...RIP, he was a great one.
We could.

Waddy Peytona

Chances of a George Jones cover during the Nashville encore?

'Twould be awesome.

Crispy

Good night, Possum.



(photo from Gawker, I thought it was cool)
"...it's gonna be great -- I mean me coming back with the band and playing all those hits again"

Angelo

Quote from: Crispy on Apr 26, 2013, 12:19 PM
Good night, Possum.



(photo from Gawker, I thought it was cool)
That's a great photo