Online Record Store - Independent Music Mailorder, Vinyl Mailorder  - Original Product
'-' before search term: expression should be omitted. '*': Wildcard
NewsArtistsGenresLabelsOffersCatalogVinylCD
0
0
Article
CD
26542
JAY CHEVALIER - Rockin' Country Sides - CD 26542
Track list
TrackArtistTitle
 
1Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsCastro Rock
2Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsMona
3Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsRock & Roll Angel
4Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsBallad Of Earl K. Long
5Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsBallad Of Marc Elishe
6Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsBilly Cannon
7Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsHighschool Hop
8Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsBig Cloud (Instr.)
9Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsBig Cloud
10Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsIt Doesn't Matter
11Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsKrushtchev And The Devil
12Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsToo Many Bubbles
13Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsCome Back To Louisiana
14Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsSatans Ground
15Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsBill Baily Ain't GO Home
16Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsCheck Out Time
17Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsLouisiana Living
18Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsBig Wheels
19Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsI'm Leaving It All Up To You
20Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsSouth To Louisiana
21Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsKeeping Late Hours
22Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsCuttin' Cane
23Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsMr. Football (Billy Cannon)
24Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsJolie Blonde
25Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsAmerican History
26Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsJohnny‘s Holding The Reason I Cry
27Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsBayou Baby
28Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsJohn T John
29Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsBlaze
30Jay Chevalier & The Louisiana Long ShotsJambalaya
RD: 2024-04-26
Stock
In stock
14.99 €
BuyNotice

JAY CHEVALIER

Rockin' Country Sides

Label:

Hydra Records

Genre:

Rockabilly

Number of disks:1
Joe J. Chevalier, known as Jay Chevalier (March 4, 1936 – March 30, 2019), was a singer and songwriter from the U.S. state of Louisiana who achieved success in several musical genres since the late 1950s. A pioneer of rockabilly music, he is best known within Louisiana for his songs based on politics, sports, and his love for his home state. The first "Official State Troubadour," he is an inductee to the Rockabilly Hall of Fame, the Louisiana Music Hall of Fame, Songwriters Hall of Fame, and the Louisiana Political Museum and Hall of Fame Chevalier was born in Forest Hill near Lecompte and reared in the community of Midway in Rapides Parish just south of Alexandria, Louisiana. He claims to have grown up "poor and naked in the piney wood hills along the banks of Bayou Boeuf." In 1954, Chevalier enlisted in the United States Marine Corps where he formed his first band, which appeared in 1957 on Jimmy Dean"s national day-time television program on CBS. Upon his discharge from the military, Chevalier recorded his first record, "Rockin [!!] Roll Angel". Gene Vincent had just recorded "Be-Bop-A-Lula", and the two became good friends and worked together in Norfolk, Virginia. Vincent died in 1971 at the age of thirty-six. In 1959, three-time Louisiana Governor Earl Kemp Long, who was barred by the state constitution from succeeding himself, ran for lieutenant governor on an intra-party ticket headed by another former governor, James A. Noe of Monroe, the owner of KNOE-TV. Intrigued by the flamboyant character, Chevalier composed and recorded The Ballad of Earl K. Long which was initially banned from radio play because it was suspected to be a political ploy though Chevalier had not personally met Long. Within a short time the song found its way onto the airways and was enthusiastically received. It sold more than 100,000 copies in the state. Long lost his bid for lieutenant governor in December 1959 to Taddy Aycock, but he rebounded the next summer with a victory over Harold B. McSween for Louisiana"s 8th congressional district seat. Long died before he could be seated, and McSween, the choice of the Democratic State Central Committee, took the seat after all. That same year, Chevalier released Billy Cannon, a rollicking tribute to LSU"s only Heisman Trophy winner, Billy Cannon, who led the LSU Tigers to win the 1958 national championship. On Halloween Night, 1959, Cannon electrified a partisan LSU crowd and stunned the Ole Miss Rebels with a fourth-quarter, 89-yard punt return to give the Tigers a 7-3 victory. Chevalier attended the game with Governor Long and while he was not really a football fan, he witnessed the pandemonium of the Tiger Stadium crowd after the touchdown and wrote the song that night. A record was released within days, adding to Cannon"s already mythical reputation. Chevalier himself became a household word from Shreveport to New Orleans. By 1962, he began performing an extended engagement at the Golden Nugget in Las Vegas, Nevada. The next year he added a 19-year-old from Baton Rouge, Grace Broussard, to his show that already included Dale Houston. Dale & Grace had just recorded an old Don and Dewey Squires song, "I"m Leaving It Up to You". While Dale, Grace, and Chevalier were on tour, the song reached No. 1 nationally and sold two million copies. In 1963, a homesick Chevalier recorded another regional hit, "Come Back to Louisiana". The song was revived when it was featured in the 1996 movie Blaze, in which Paul Newman played Earl Long. Chevalier was a consultant for the movie and played the role of Senator Paul Braden. "Come Back to Louisiana" was re-recorded in 2006 to encourage victims of Hurricane Katrina to return home to rebuild. The Louisiana State Legislature adopted "Come Back to Louisiana" as the third state song. The two others are "You Are My Sunshine" by former Governor Jimmie Davis and "Give Me Louisiana". Chevalier"s office was flooded, and his home suffered tree damage during Hurricane Katrina. He re-introduced "Come Back to Louisiana" and sang it A cappella to the legislature. In the 1970s, Chevalier returned to Louisiana from appearances in Las Vegas, to manage a number of political campaigns. Chevalier is a member of the Rockabilly Hall of Fame. He was inducted into the Louisiana Political Museum and Hall of Fame in January 2003, and on December 7, 2008, he was named to the Louisiana Music Hall of Fame. He was also designated ""Official State Troubadour" by an act of the Louisiana Legislature in 2006. Chevalier performed several times a year until he passed away in 2019.
Manufacturer/importer information
Stock
In stock
14.99 €
BuyNotice
Logo
Record Store & Vinyl Mailorder
Original Product

Oberhafen-Kontor / Stadtdeich 27
20097 Hamburg
Contact Imprint Delivery fees
GTC Withdrawal Privacy
MariaDB GUI and SQL Manager
newsletter melde Dich an