Track Listing DISC 1: 1. Why Baby Why 2. Just One More 3. Tall, Tall Trees 4. Color of the Blues 5. White Lightning 6. Window up Above 7. Tender Years 8. She Thinks I Still Care 9. You Comb Her Hair 10. Race Is On, The 11. We Must Have Been Out of Our Minds - (with Melba Montgomery) 12. Still Doin' Time 13. Walk Through This World With Me 14. She's Mine 15. I'll Share My World With You 16. Good Year For the Roses, A - (with Alan Jackson) 17. Take Me - (with Tammy Wynette)
DISC 2: 1. Picture of Me Without You, A 2. Once You've Had the Best 3. Grand Tour, The 4. These Days I Barely Get By 5. Her Name Is 6. Near You - (with Tammy Wynette) 7. Bartender's Blues - (with James Taylor) 8. Nightlife - (with Waylon Jennings) 9. He Stopped Loving Her Today 10. Yesterday's Wine - (with Merle Haggard) 11. Same Ole 12. I Always Get Lucky With You 13. She's My Rock 14. Who's Gonna Fill Their Shoes 15. One I Loved Back Then, The (Corvette Song) 16. Right Left Hard, The 17. Radio Lover
DISC 3: 1. I'm a One Woman Man 2. Few Ole Country Boys, A - (with Randy Travis) 3. You Couldn't Get the Picture 4. Finally Friday 5. I Don't Need Your Rockin' Chair 6. High-Tech Redneck 7. One - (with Tammy Wynette) 8. I Must Have Done Something Bad 9. When Did You Stop Loving Me 10. Wild Irish Rose 11. Choices 12. Cold Hard Truth, The 13. Beer Run (B Double E Double Are You in?) - (with Garth Brooks) 14. 50,000 Names 15. I Got Everything 16. Amazing Grace
| Details | | Producer: | Billy Sherrill, Buddy Cannon, Evelyn Shriver (Compilation), Kyle Lehning, Norro Wilson, Pappy Daily | | Distributor: | Welk | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Personnel include: George Jones (vocals, guitar); Melba Montgomery (vocals); Garth Brooks, Alan Jackson, Merle Haggard, Randy Travis, Tammy Wynette, Waylon Jennings. Recording information: 1955 - 2004. Even the title of the three-disc George Jones collection 50 YEARS OF HITS should be enough to tell you that the man being anthologized is one of the all-time giants of country music. A towering influence on all that followed him, not only in country but in rock and pop as well, Jones started out in the 1950s as a Hank Williams-influenced honky-tonk man who wasn't afraid of a little rockabilly either (the Hank influence is clearly audible on such early tracks as "Just One More"). By the '60s, he'd refined his approach, taking a bit from the jazz-inflected style of Lefty Frizzell and becoming a striking balladeer. "She Thinks I Still Care" and "Color of the Blues" stand as templates for how to sing a country ballad. For most performers, that would have been enough, but Jones never stopped turning out heart-stopping performances. This is underscored by the presence of the mid-period mind-blower "He Stopped Loving Her Today," which reaches a superhuman level of pathos, and latter-day tracks such as the unstintingly bleak "The Cold Hard Truth," as well as the high-spirited, good-humored "Beer Run (B Double E Double Are You In?)." In case future generations want to know what country music was all about back in the 20th century, there should be a copy of 50 YEARS OF HITS placed in a time capsule.
Editorial Reviews Strict chronology allows for fun realizations... - Grade: A Entertainment Weekly
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