- Sounds of Goodbye
- Tell Me
- There Must Be a Someone (I Can Turn To)
- Woman's Disgrace
- Multiple Heartaches
- Love at First Sight
- The Victim
- Uncommitted Man
- Catch the Wind
- She's Gone
- No Matter Where You Go (There You Are)
- Hangin' On
- Wishing
- Louisiana Man
- I'll Live Today
- For Us to Find
- One Hundred Years from Now
- Bowling Green
- I'll Live With God (To Die No More)
- The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face
- Love of the Common People
- She Still Wishes I Were You
- Had a Lot of Friends
- Let It Be Me
×
Uh-oh, it looks like your Internet Explorer is out of date.
For a better shopping experience, please upgrade now.
0029667423526
$13.66
$13.99
Save 2%
Current price is $13.66, Original price is $13.99. You Save 2%.

CD
Members save with free shipping everyday!
See details
See details
13.66
In Stock
Overview
The Gosdin Brothers' obscure 1968 LP Sounds of Goodbye is an overlooked country-rock milestone, and one that owes as much to the sound of the 1966-1967 era Byrds as it does to country music. That's unsurprising, perhaps, given that the Gosdins helped out a lot on Gene Clark's debut solo album in 1967, and sometimes shared bills with the early Byrds, as they shared the same management. In truth, this will appeal far more to the early Byrds fan than to the straight country fan. That's not damning with faint praise, far from it; it's actually high praise. It's a fair guess, too, that anyone who likes Gene Clark's early work will enjoy this record, as it has a similar low-key, hurt, vulnerable mystique to the melodies, vocals, and harmonies. The material, though sometimes average, is also sometimes outstanding, as on "Love at First Sight," which actually comes quite close to the classic 1966 Byrds jangle rock sound; the melancholy, graceful "She's Gone," with the kind of unexpected compelling chord changes you'd expect from the Gene Clark songwriting school; and "The Victim," with its pungent burned-by-love lyrics, and an odd (though not displeasing) dash of psychedelic echo on the chorus. The covers cast an eclectic net ("Catch the Wind," "Let It Be Me," the Everly Brothers' "Bowling Green") and are not as distinctive as the originals, but even so there's an excellent reading of Ewan MacColl's "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face."
Product Details
Release Date: | 11/25/2003 |
---|---|
Label: | Big Beat Uk |
UPC: | 0029667423526 |
catalogNumber: | 235 |
Rank: | 59862 |
Tracks
Album Credits
Performance Credits
Gosdin Brothers Primary ArtistMike Deasy Guitar
Jerry Scheff Bass
James M. "Jimmy" Troxel Drums
Technical Credits
Clarence White ComposerDoug Kershaw Composer
Ewan MacColl Composer
Vern Gosdin Composer
Chris Hillman Producer
Eddie Rabbitt Composer
Donovan Composer
Gilbert Bécaud Composer
Don Hinson Composer
Manny Curtis Composer
Pierre Delanoë Composer
Rex Gosdin Composer
Eddie Hill Composer
John Hurley Composer
Ira Louvin Composer
Charlie Louvin Composer
Terry Slater Arranger
Ronnie Wilkins Composer
Bill Bailey Liner Notes
James Paxton Composer
Alec Palao Liner Notes,Concept
Kenneth Johnson Composer
Ira Allen Composer
Jacqueline Ertel Arranger
Dick Brown Cover Photo
Traditional Composer
Buddy Mize Composer
Jan Paxton Composer
Customer Reviews
Related Searches
Explore More Items
You could call Chiswick Stiff's poorer brother and, to an extent, you'd be right, but ...
You could call Chiswick Stiff's poorer brother and, to an extent, you'd be right, but
it gets the time line slightly wrong. Chiswick actually beat Stiff to the starting gate, releasing the Count Bishops' rip-roaring Route 66/Teenage Letter in November ...
The Midnite Sound studio in Danville, IL was one of many such operations grinding out ...
The Midnite Sound studio in Danville, IL was one of many such operations grinding out
obscure garage rock in the mid-'60s. If any of its product is remembered at all, it's the weird rockabilly-cum-garage of Dean Carter, who put out ...
The Music Machine's debut would have been a lot better if they'd let Sean Bonniwell ...
The Music Machine's debut would have been a lot better if they'd let Sean Bonniwell
write all of the songs. Yet it was, as was often the case at the time, divided between fine Bonniwell originals and dispensable covers of ...
Songwriter and guitarist Dave Alvin was the heart of the Blasters, one of America's greatest ...
Songwriter and guitarist Dave Alvin was the heart of the Blasters, one of America's greatest
roots rock bands, but his brother, vocalist Phil Alvin, was the soul of the group, and anyone who wants a crash course on the importance ...