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That'll Flat Git It, Vol. 29: Rockabilly & Rock 'n' Roll From the Vaults of Crest Records
Barnes and Noble
That'll Flat Git It, Vol. 29: Rockabilly & Rock 'n' Roll From the Vaults of Crest Records
Current price: $19.99
Barnes and Noble
That'll Flat Git It, Vol. 29: Rockabilly & Rock 'n' Roll From the Vaults of Crest Records
Current price: $19.99
Size: OS
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The 29th installment of
Bear Family
's long-running rockabilly series
That'll Flat Git It!
shines a spotlight on
Crest Records
, a Hollywood-based imprint that opened its doors in 1954 and shuttered in 1963. Its lifespan ran the length of the big boom of rockabilly, but that didn't mean that
Crest
wound up scoring any big hits, but they did claim early recordings by
Eddie Cochran
and
Glen Campbell
.
Cochran
made his solo debut with "Skinny Jim," the best-known side here by a country mile, while
Campbell
plays lead guitar on "Rockin' and a Rollin'," a bit of a lark sung by his uncle
Dick Bills
. A fair amount of the compilation is devoted to country boogie, ranging from
Tom Wilson
's reconstituted Western swing "Can You Bop?" and the lightning steels of
the Desert Stars
' "Ridin' the Frets" to
Tom Tall & His Tom Kats
, who have a pair of terrific backwoods rockers in "Stack-A-Records" and "Mary Jo." Sitting alongside these country numbers is splashy Hollywood exploitation along the lines of
Johnny Donn & the Jazz Rockers
' "What Happened Last Night," and when these two sides combine, they offer a portrait of how wild and fun the early days of rock & roll were: fly-by-night labels like
were ready to try anything, and that sense of adventure is something to be prized. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Bear Family
's long-running rockabilly series
That'll Flat Git It!
shines a spotlight on
Crest Records
, a Hollywood-based imprint that opened its doors in 1954 and shuttered in 1963. Its lifespan ran the length of the big boom of rockabilly, but that didn't mean that
Crest
wound up scoring any big hits, but they did claim early recordings by
Eddie Cochran
and
Glen Campbell
.
Cochran
made his solo debut with "Skinny Jim," the best-known side here by a country mile, while
Campbell
plays lead guitar on "Rockin' and a Rollin'," a bit of a lark sung by his uncle
Dick Bills
. A fair amount of the compilation is devoted to country boogie, ranging from
Tom Wilson
's reconstituted Western swing "Can You Bop?" and the lightning steels of
the Desert Stars
' "Ridin' the Frets" to
Tom Tall & His Tom Kats
, who have a pair of terrific backwoods rockers in "Stack-A-Records" and "Mary Jo." Sitting alongside these country numbers is splashy Hollywood exploitation along the lines of
Johnny Donn & the Jazz Rockers
' "What Happened Last Night," and when these two sides combine, they offer a portrait of how wild and fun the early days of rock & roll were: fly-by-night labels like
were ready to try anything, and that sense of adventure is something to be prized. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine