A1 | The Green River Boys Featuring Glen Campbell | Truck Driving Man | Terry Fell | Rate |
A2 | The Green River Boys Featuring Glen Campbell | There's More Pretty Girls Than One | Alton Delmore, Arthur Smith | Rate |
A3 | The Green River Boys Featuring Glen Campbell | Weary Lonesome Blues | Alton Delmore | Rate |
A4 | The Green River Boys Featuring Glen Campbell | No Vacancy | Merle Travis, Cliffie Stone | Rate |
A5 | The Green River Boys Featuring Glen Campbell | Rainin' On The Mountain | Alton Delmore | Rate |
A6 | The Green River Boys Featuring Glen Campbell | Kentucky Means Paradise | Merle Travis | Rate |
B1 | The Green River Boys Featuring Glen Campbell | Brown's Ferry Blues | Alton Delmore | Rate |
B2 | The Green River Boys Featuring Glen Campbell | Lonesome Jailhouse Blues | Alton Delmore, Rabon Delmore | Rate |
B3 | The Green River Boys Featuring Glen Campbell | One Hundred Miles Away From Home | Capehart, Campbell, Venet | Rate |
B4 | The Green River Boys Featuring Glen Campbell | This Old White Mule Of Mine | Bob Nolan | Rate |
B5 | The Green River Boys Featuring Glen Campbell | Poor Boy Lookin' For A Home | Melvin Schmidt | Rate |
B6 | The Green River Boys Featuring Glen Campbell | Long Black Limousine | Vern Stovell, Bobby George | Rate |
Produced by Nick Venet.
Stereo version released as ST-1810.
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Bill Fick 6th Mar 2015
| | Track B3 is a longer edit on the mono pressing than on the stereo one... |
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Neil Forbes 5th Mar 2015
| | I just saw the last comment you made and I did LOL laugh out loud... you crack me up, RC, you really do!. Though I have to say, I noted the 1962 issue date on this LP. This is the label design used back then, the trademark shifted from left to top of label.... fast-forward to the late 1980s and what design should pop up again...? Yep You guessed it. Though I think the rainbow perimeter isn't quite as wide as what's on this one. |
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Record Collector 5th Mar 2015
| | Excuse while I go down my dungeon and scream at the top of my lungs lol |
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Neil Forbes 5th Mar 2015
| | That label design that you've shown here RC, is of the late 1980s/early 1990s, but it's basically a revival of a much earlier design in some way, the return of the rainbow colouring around the perimeter, and the Capitol trademark in the silver elyptical shape harks back to the 1950s, only back then the trademark was at left of the spindle centre, now it's at the top of the label. Capitol revived this design in the latter half of the 1980s. Up to then they were using the plain purple label with the Capitol TM prominent in the top half. |
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Record Collector 5th Mar 2015
| | Here is a example the label I'm referring to |
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