Picked up on e-bay for a cheap price! But as with most acetates the sound on both side is a bit eggs & bacon! but still sounds pretty good and for historical reasons it needs to be heard!
The A side is a lovely country song about a cheating wife and how he'll be long gone in the morning! Chuck's vocal is superb and with unknown fiddle & Electric guitar (I would imagine Chuck plays the Rhythm Guitar) this is just a really good country tune! played with elegance and has all the makings of really good record! The flip 'Slowly' has a lot more noise and is your typical country slow tune! good but not as good as 'I'm Long Gone'
Lynn Pratt was born on April 9th 1926 in Sugar Tree, Tennessee and died on January 19, 2002, in Lexington at the age of 75. He is buried at the Henderson County Memorial Gardens in Lexington.
In early 1956 after recording at Sun Studios (to no reward) Pratt started up his own label simply called 'Hornet Records' in Lexington, Tennessee. 1st issue on his new label was 'Tom Cat Boogie/At Night Time - The A side is the mover for sure and all band members are going for it ! Recorded in Nashville WSIX Radio studios it really is a tip top Tom Cat tune! fine Rockabilly guitar laced with Piano & Steel(this session probably did not include drummer Henry Hays)
The Flip is a really nice country slow song played with care and has some nice piano with Pratt singing this broken hearted melody with gusto! Nice guitar to start interspersed steel guitar and an unknown fiddle player!
Lynn Pratt & The Tomcats - Hornet Records # 1001 - 195?
A Side - Troubles (Pratt)
B Side - I Don't Need (Pratt)
This 2nd Hornet release by Lynn Pratt (seen now with his named band 'The Tomcats) and they give us 'Troubles'! now! not as good as Tom Cat Boogie! but non the less it's a cracking mid tempo slice of country bop! I would imagine the band from the 1st release would remain but as we are unclear on a actual recording date and year this is just a guess (but it does have a similar feel to # 1000). Two cracking country numbers by Lynn and the boys , plenty of steel and piano and it is basically a verry very good country record! the A side swings with some great guitar pickin' and the B side weeps! just as all good 78 records should! shouldn't they?
A - Side - I'm Sorry I Got In The Way (Vocal by Dale Noe) # F-1016
B - Side - Houn' Dog Boogie # FF-1016
As was the norm around the late 40's & early 50's Sheldon Gibbs was a bar owner, radio personality, restaurant manager and leader of a band! and as would have it Sheldon was a very popular band leader and was the first guy to discover Marty Robins!
The A side is just a real nice country tune with all the usual trimmings but it's when you flip the thing over you get! well you get very close to a Rockabilly tune! Slim Forbes on Fiddle, Bud Croy and Dale Noe on Guitars and they really cook up a storm on this pretty hard to find slice of shellac! the beginnings of Rock 'N' Roll and Rockabilly is nearly here and the Houn' Dog Boogie has a bark! a pretty loud bark!
Side A - We Can Never Love Again (Vocal by Tiny & Cliff)
Side B - High Geared Daddy
I have another Tommy Little 78 record on the 'Ollit' label 'Mean, Mean Woman' which is also a damn fine record! 'High Geared Daddy' was released on his own label in Durham, North Carolina & was also released the same year on the Colonial Records label after they heard this TRC version above!
Classic Country bluegrass, fast moving, banjo pickin' tune about how his woman goes down through his gears! to keep him from moving to fast! typical record of it's time, a little racy! as we know what he's eluding to but is never said! quality in all the ways you want!
At times you can hear the Rockabilly trying to get through but was just a few years to early! just replace the banjo with a hot pickin' guitar and Tommy might have got there first!
Dave "Diddlie" Day with Tony Ray Combo - Fee Bee Records # 212
April 1957.
Side A - Blue Moon Baby
Side B - Suzanne My Love
A tough one to find on 78 and just has tough on the Fee Bee 45! a very late 78 rpm press for 1957!
This as anyone knows is a tale of two sides! 'Suzanne My Love' is the kind of record that will never be played, remembered or for that fact even liked! turgid slow love song with no heart or for that matter love!
But then as we know you flip to the A side and you get monster rockabilly minor chord wonderment! 'Blue Moon Baby' ! a truly marvellous tune with shuddering guitar and rhythmic moody shuffle! a true! great record!
Side A - Jesus Hits Lile The Atom Bomb (vocals by Milton Beasley & Miller Louther)
Side B - Mississippi Boogie (vocals by Milton Beasley)
Red pleasant and the Southern Serenaders were one helluva hillbilly swing outfit back in the day but both these tunes are elevated due to top vocals by Milton & Miller on the Atom Bomb side and also some tasty red hot boogie guitar. America was in a state of panic over the Atomic Bomb around this time so by tapping into their fear and then telling them that the lord will come when the bomb hits was pure marketing genius!!!
The Mississippi Boogie side is also hot, hot, hot .......like boogie Red hot! that guitar and steel is just marvelous and at times near perfect! again great vocals by Milton Beasley. This is a record that ticks every box........every time you spin it!
Jimmy Cox along with Don Mason really turn it up to eleven on this scorcher on the Blue Ribbon label out of Illinois!
What you get here on the A side is pretty much what you'd expect from this label and year, top quality country where everything is in its place and it just sounds like perfection to me! sublime Guitar by Mr Mason , lovely smooth vovals by Jimmy and some weepy steel and boy it just sounds so purty!