Friday, 21 April 2023

Carl Belew born 21 April 1931


Carl Robert Belew (April 21, 1931 – October 31, 1990) was an American country music singer and songwriter. Belew recorded for Decca, RCA Victor, and MCA in the 1950s through 1970s, charting 11 times on Hot Country Songs. He also wrote singles for Johnnie & Jack, Eddy Arnold, Jim Reeves, and others. Despite recording eight albums between 1960 and 1972, Carl Belew is best remembered as a songwriter whose work was covered by an eclectic group of artists ranging from Patsy Cline to Gene Vincent to Andy Williams. 

Born in Salina, Oklahoma, Carl Belew left school at 15 and became a plumber, but he was intent on becoming a musician. He became one of a long list of performers who moved on from making small rockabilly records to country music fame as both a singer and songwriter. His rockers include Cool Gator Shoes and Folding Money on Four Star for whom he made his debut in 1955 after being brought to the company's attention by Marvin Rainwater. By the following year, he gained his first widespread exposure thanks to appearances on a pair of California-based radio programs, Town Hall Party and The Cliffie Stone Show. In 1957, he performed on the Louisiana Hayride. 

He signed to Decca Records by the end of the decade, reaching number 9 on the country music charts with "Am I That Easy to Forget", which was later recorded by Skeeter Davis, Debbie Reynolds, Esther Phillips, Engelbert Humperdinck, Jim Reeves, and others. In 1958 Johnnie & Jack recorded Belew's "Stop the World and Let Me Off", while Andy Williams hit the Top Five with "Lonely Street," a song which would become Belew's trademark tune thanks to subsequent covers by Cline, Vincent, and Rex Allen, Jr. Strangely for such a great writer, Belew scored two hits with Crystal Chandeliers and Hello Out There, neither of which he penned. 


                              

In 1960, Belew released his self-titled debut LP; in the same year, he notched a Top 20 hit with the single "Too Much to Lose." Two years later, a label change to RCA prompted another eponymous effort; the single "Hello Out There" earned him another Top Ten hit, his last.

Between 1964 and 1968, Belew released an album a year, beginning with Hello Out There and continuing with Am I That Easy to Forget?, Country Songs, Lonely Street, and finally Twelve Shades of Belew. His last studio album, When My Baby Sings His Song, a record of duets with Betty Jean Robinson, was issued in 1972, while one final single, "Welcome Back to My World," appeared in 1974. 

Throughout his career, Belew's songs continued to be popular with (and popularized by) other singers; Eddy Arnold hit number one in 1965 with "What's He Doing in My World," while Jim Reeves scored a posthumous success in 1968 with "That's When I See the Blues (In Your Pretty Brown Eyes)." "Stop the World (And Let Me Off)" also reached the Top 20 twice more thanks to a 1965 cover by Waylon Jennings and a 1974 version by Susan Raye. In 1976 Belew was inducted into Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. 

Carl Belew died of cancer on October 31, 1990, in Salina, Oklahoma at the age of 59. Two years after his death he won the Music City News award for Best Song with Look At Us. It's a beautiful ballad (If they want to know what true love should be, they'll just look at us), which was a massive hit for Vince Gill. In 2027 he was inducted into the Oklahoma Music Hall Of Fame. 

(Edited fron AllMusic, TIMS, Hillbilly Music & Wikipedia)

6 comments:

  1. For “Carl Belew – The Early Years - 1956-62 (2021 Acrobat)” go here:

    https://www.imagenetz.de/jVf55

    Disc 1
    1 I'm Long Gone Carl Belew & His Riff Riders
    2 Silence And Tears Carl Belew & His Riff Riders
    3 Lonely Street Carl Belew & His Rock Crushers
    4 A Cryin' And A Hurtin' Carl Belew & His Rock Crushers
    5 Lie To Me Carl Belew & His Grand River Boys
    6 Old Number Nine Carl Belew & His Grand River Boys
    7 Stop The World (And Let Me Off) Carl Belew
    8 I Can't Forget Carl Belew
    9 Everytime I'm Kissing You Carl Belew
    10 Twenty-Four Hour Night Carl Belew
    11 My Baby's Not Here (In Town Tonight) Carl Belew
    12 No Love Tonight Carl Belew
    13 I Wish You Love Carl Belew
    14 Am I That Easy To Forget Carl Belew
    15 Such Is Life Carl Belew
    16 Cool Gator Shoes Carl Belew
    17 No Regrets Carl Belew
    18 I Know, But Tell Me Dear (It Didn't Happen) Carl Belew
    19 I Wish I'd Never Carl Belew
    20 Too Much To Lose Carl Belew
    21 That’s What I Get For Lovin‘ You Carl Belew
    22 The End Of Time Carl Belew
    23 My Baby's Not Here (In Town Tonight) Carl Belew
    24 There She Goes Carl Belew
    25 You're Doing Things To Hurt Me Carl Belew
    26 Lonely Street Carl Belew

    Disc 2

    1 Release Me (And Let Me Love Again) Carl Belew
    2 It Happened When I Really Needed You Carl Belew
    3 Another Lonely Night Carl Belew
    4 I Can’t Lose Something (That I’ve Never Had) Carl Belew
    5 Can't Take A Chance Carl Belew
    6 Stop The World (And Let Me Off) (1961 version) Carl Belew
    7 I'm So Lonesome Carl Belew
    8 Do I Have To (Have A Reason) Carl Belew
    9 I Don’t Know How I’ll Live (And Feel This Way) Carl Belew
    10 Can't You Hear Me Call Your Name Carl Belew
    11 Second Chance Carl Belew
    12 Odd Man Out Carl Belew
    13 Hello Out There Carl Belew
    14 Together We Stand Carl Belew
    15 Wishful Thinking Carl Belew
    16 The One You Slip Around With Carl Belew
    17 Love's Been Good To Me Carl Belew
    18 Three Cheers For The Red, White And Blue Carl Belew
    19 Send Me The Pillow Carl Belew
    20 Where Do I Go (When I Get To Where I'm Going) Carl Belew
    21 Make Up Your Mind (And Say Yes) Carl Belew
    22 Little Miss Heartache Carl Belew
    23 Three Cheers For The Loser Carl Belew
    24 Just Out Of Reach Carl Belew
    25 I Gotta Go Get My Baby Carl Belew
    26 You're The Only Good Thing Carl Belew

    This track list has been reconstructed using mp3’s from the Warped Chronological series.

    Carl Belew was a country singer and songwriter who, as well as having hits on his own, provided songs for other artists. Coming to prominence in the late ‘50s, his songs provided Top 10 country hits for the likes of Faron Young, Johnnie & Jack, Andy Williams and Debbie Reynolds. This 52-track 2-CD set comprises the A and B sides of his singles during these years on the Sowder, 4 Star, Decca and RCA-Victor labels, along with the tracks from his 1960 Decca album "Carl Belew" not otherwise released on singles and all the tracks from his 1962 album, also called "Carl Belew" on the Wrangler/Forum Circle label. It features his Top 10 country hits "Am I That Easy To Forget" and "Hello Out There", and the Top 20 hit "Too Much To Lose", plus his own recordings of his hit songs for other artists, "Every Time I'm Kissing You", "Stop The World (and Let Me Off)" and "Lonely Street". It's a comprehensive overview of the key formative years of his career, which provided the platform for his later success, and we trust it provides a worthy showcase for his talents as both songwriter and performer. (Product notes)

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  2. Bob,
    Please reup this collection, thank you.

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  3. Hello HP, Here's Carl......
    https://mega.nz/file/x3oRCaLY#8Z4A259y2biSfpoR2bX6iknO4ITnc0v7dZEQsM5n5UY

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