[78-L] had a good 78 day
Dan Van Landingham
danvanlandingham at yahoo.com
Tue Apr 6 20:14:41 PDT 2010
Was this the same Time Records from the sixties?I've got an album with Billy May that featured trumpeter
John Best,alto saxophonist Skeets Herfurt and Al Hendrickson.I know little about the company.Was Bob
Shad connected with them?
________________________________
From: Glenn Longwell <glongwell at snet.net>
To: 78-L Mail List <78-l at klickitat.78online.com>
Sent: Tue, April 6, 2010 2:31:16 PM
Subject: Re: [78-L] had a good 78 day
Congratulations on your find Bill. The thrill of the hunt sometimes brings in the big prize!
Being from the northeast I haven't been able to come across too many Texas labels but I have one finally coming to me soon - Bobby Burns Septet on Time Records 1111 (Dalhart, TX). Any idea on a date for this? Thanks.
Glenn
--- On Tue, 4/6/10, Matthew Duncan <recordgeek334578 at yahoo.com> wrote:
From: Matthew Duncan <recordgeek334578 at yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: [78-L] had a good 78 day
To: "78-L Mail List" <78-l at klickitat.78online.com>
Date: Tuesday, April 6, 2010, 4:53 PM
All sounds great...always have liked Mr Abshire...I have several 45s by him but no 78s...apparently the Khourys ones of his are pretty scarce....in fact 78s on Khourys by anyone aren't often seen..same with Goldband and Folk Star..I have several of those, mainly rockabilly/hillbilly orientated....but scarcity may be partly because Mr Shuler used old 78s stock as foundations for a driveway in the 60s??!! Don't know if the story is true though...!
Cheers
Matthew
UK.
________________________________
From: Bill McClung <bmcclung78 at gmail.com>
To: 78-L Mail List <78-l at klickitat.78online.com>
Sent: Tue, 6 April, 2010 20:59:47
Subject: [78-L] had a good 78 day
I picked up about 400 78s Saturday from a fellow in Port Arthur, Texas. He
had seen me on TV last summer and said I could have them if I would pick
them up. I finally got there and it was worth the trip.
They were all post war. About 150 of them were commons. Rosemary and Perry
and Frankie and Hank and Bing and the Andrews Sisters. The other 250 were
all blues and r&b and early rocknroll. A dozen Jimmy Reeds and some
Lightnin' Hopkins and some John Lee Hookers and some Ray Charleses and some
Little Willie Johns and so on.
But the prizes, to me anyway, were some Texas label 78s. Two Diamonds from
Port Arthur, a Duke I didn't have, a couple of AYOs from Houston, a Town
Lounge Club from Houston, and the first Hot Rod Record from San Antonio that
I had ever seen. Hot Rod did Cajun music in the late 50s. This one was by
Nathan Abshire.
Some days the hunt is worth it. Guess I'll keep on looking.
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