• Home
  • About
    • Western Red
    • Demo
    • Contact
  • Listen Again
  • Shows
    • Episode 613 - Box o' 45s: Rem Wall & The Green Valley Boys
    • Episode 602 - Hugh X. Lewis - Country Fever
    • Episode 594 - Ray Pillow - Even When It's Bad It's Good!
    • Episode 588 - Sean Burns - Lost Country
    • Episode 583 - Red's Country Ladies
    • Episode 570 - Pat Patterson - Most Requested Country Songs
    • Episode 564 - Stoney Edwards - Land Of The Giants
    • Episode 557 - Sonny Burns: 1959-1968
    • Episode 551 - The Derailers - Full Western Dress
  • On Air
    • USA
    • Australia & New Zealand
    • UK & Online
  • Community

If That Ain't Country

  • Home
  • About
    • Western Red
    • Demo
    • Contact
  • Listen Again
  • Shows
    • Episode 613 - Box o' 45s: Rem Wall & The Green Valley Boys
    • Episode 602 - Hugh X. Lewis - Country Fever
    • Episode 594 - Ray Pillow - Even When It's Bad It's Good!
    • Episode 588 - Sean Burns - Lost Country
    • Episode 583 - Red's Country Ladies
    • Episode 570 - Pat Patterson - Most Requested Country Songs
    • Episode 564 - Stoney Edwards - Land Of The Giants
    • Episode 557 - Sonny Burns: 1959-1968
    • Episode 551 - The Derailers - Full Western Dress
  • On Air
    • USA
    • Australia & New Zealand
    • UK & Online
  • Community
Back to all posts

Reba McEntire - My Kind Of Country 

In this week's episode, we're featuring Reba McEntire's second album for MCA: "My Kind Of Country" (1984). After being plucked from the rodeo arena in 1974, Mercury Records took McEntire and turned her into a recording professional. Her signing with MCA in the early 80s was meant to cement her as a country superstar. However her first MCA release stalled. Reba was no fool - sensing a shift away from the post-Urban Cowboy polish, she rejected the country-pop offerings being pushed by the executives and instead, went digging in her own record collection for inspiration. She pulled out some of the best that the 50s and 60s had to offer, enlisted producer Jimmy Bowen, added fiddlers Johnny Gimble and Mark O'Connor along with steelers Sonny Garrish and Doyle Grisham. With that team, "My Kind Of Country" was born and Reba was afforded two singles for two Number One hits. With that team, Jimmy Bowen (who also produced George Strait around the same time) collaborated with Reba and her gut instinct for traditional country and did indeed cement McEntire as a bona fide country star. Highlights include two Ray Price covers in "I Want To Hear It From You" and "Don't You Believe Him", a revamped version of Carl Smith's 1956 hit "Before I Met You" and the reserved lovelorn ballad "How Blue".

0:00/???
  1. Ep. 323 - Reba McEntire - My Kind Of Country
Subscribe with iTunes RSS feed Download

01/24/2019

  • 1 comment
  • Share
    Reba McEntire - My Kind Of Country

    Share link

1 comment

Some images ©

  • Log out

notes
0:00/???
  1. 1
    Ep. 613 - Box o' 45s- Rem Wall & The Green Valley Boys 2:36:11
    Ep. 613 - Box o' 45s- Rem Wall & The Green Valley Boys

    Share link

    Free
    0:00/2:36:11
0:00/???