MEL STREET RARE LIVE VIDEO - The Town Where You Live - 1978 descargar videos gratis


36,306
Duración: 03:14
Subido: 2010/04/24

From THAT GOOD OLE NASHVILLE MUSIC, this performance is one of the 2 national television shows Mel did before his passing less than a year after this. This is classic Mel Street with Johnny Gimble on fiddle and Hal Rugg on steel guitar along with the likes of Spider Wilson and Leon Rhodes on guitars and Jerry Whitehurst on Piano. NO OWNERSHIP IS IMPLIED!!

Comentarios

10 years ago

Tracy Whitt

He was a very great singer, one of my favs by him ..

10 years ago

j Brooks

Thanks for sharing. We lost a great country music voice with his death. Sometime we have demons we just can't handle. Maybe one day they will find a way to help. I love his music so much. Saw him live in the 70's in Chattanooga, TN. Loved his music then and still do.

12 years ago

terry hill

if i could only sing that well, i would sing for free, just to keep his sound alive,,,Mel sings better than anyone i ever known

13 years ago

Chuck Clarke

so sad a few months later he would take his own life

14 years ago

DIRKWORKS2

@JASMAT73 Thank you !! If someone can't hear the difference in the phrasing between Hal and Johnny Gimble on the intro compared to the record, they should keep their mouth shut. Those guys REALLY played that good and Mel really sang that well!! That's the difference in music today and back then. The pretty people have to lip sync. We'd have missed a lot of wonderful music if only young folks that look good were on the radio. Nothing against those folks. Just sayin.......

14 years ago

JASMAT73

brain fart! tempo is up in this vidop. To make TV time...no lip service...case closed

14 years ago

JASMAT73

IF it was was lip-synched, that's TV for ya. An act is what it is, an act. Dont want any screw ups on the air. That performance doesnt sound ANYTHING like the public cut though. I am a very big fan of Mr. Street. I think he had a very personal, genuine way of getting his songs into the listeners head, which lead down to the heart. You could FEEL what he sang. If you never had lost love or cheated, you KNEW what it felt like, w/ his songs. he truly LIVED his songs. thats Y he died. IF

14 years ago

JASMAT73

IF it was was lip-synched, that's TV for ya. An act is what it is, an act. Dont want any screw ups on the air. That performance doesnt sound ANYTHING like the public cut though. I am a very big fan of Mr. Street. I think he had a very personal, genuine way of getting his songs into the listeners head, which lead down to the heart. You could FEEL what he sang. If you never had lost love or cheated, you KNEW what it felt like, w/ his songs. he truly LIVED his songs. thats Y he died. IF only

14 years ago

DIRKWORKS2

@bobbyniemi NOOOO!!! you'd be BAD wrong! If you can't tell the difference in the phrasing of the intro, it's totally different. Hal's fills are totally different. IF you can't tell from the steel fills in the second verse alone, I'd suggest that you try to play your album along side of this LIVE performance. Not lip synced. I know most all of the guys in the band. I won't argue anymore with you on that subject. lol...

14 years ago

Bobby Niemi

This is all lip synched...... I have the albums and it is to the tee! way fake! I love Mel Street, he gave Sammy Kershaw his influence, and I love it, but this is all lip synched!~!!!!!!!

14 years ago

DIRKWORKS2

@CajunTroubadours It most certainly IS Jerry. If you'll open up the section with my description, it tells the names of the players and I most certainly gave Jerry his credit. I was 13 years old at this point, so it surely wasn't me. hahahaha

14 years ago

CajunTroubadours

I thought that was Jerry Whitehurst on Piano!

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