THE LEGACY OF BILL GRAHAM
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Lacy J. Dalton

Sample this concert
  1. 1Gettin' Over You04:31
  2. 2Takin' It Easy03:46
  3. 3Hillbilly Girl With The Blues03:08
  4. 4Wide Eyed And Willing02:57
  5. 5Everybody Makes Mistakes03:48
  6. 6Crazy Blue Eyes03:13
  7. 7Wild Turkey04:16
  8. 8Hard Times02:37
  9. 9You Can't Take The Texas Out Of Me03:15
  10. 10You Satisfy Me03:27
  11. 11Dream Baby03:46
  12. 1216th Avenue03:14
  13. 13Rock With Me02:14
  14. 14Dixie Devil05:03
  15. 15Outlaw03:34
  16. 16Baby, Better Start Turnin' Em Down04:06
Liner Notes

Lacy J. Dalton - lead vocals, guitar; Shelton Kurland - pedal steel guitar; Pete Bordonali - guitar; Jerry Carrigan - drums; Kurt Howell - keyboards; Unknown - bass

Lacy J. Dalton, who was born as Jill Byrem in Bloomfield, PA (and who also recorded under the married name of Jill Croston), had a bright star on the country music scene for nearly a decade. This show, originally broadcast for the Silver Eagle Cross Country Radio Series, was captured at the Lone Star Roadhouse in New York City by WHN at what was the height of her popularity.

Dalton grew up in the mining communities of Pennsylvania, but her first musical love was the early '60s protest music made famous by Bob Dylan and Joan Baez. After dropping out of college in the late '60s, she migrated to San Francisco, where she tried breaking into to the music industry as a protest singer. She was spotted by the manager of a Bay Area psychedelic rock band who decided to transform her in the same way Janis Joplin had gone from singing solo folk music and blues to electric rock with a full band. She married him, changing her name to Jill Croston and fronted the group, the Office, which he was representing.

The Office never took off, and when Dalton's husband drowned in a swimming pool accident, she decided to re-invent herself as a country singer. Dalton was still using her married name when she got her first album on an independent label in the late 1970s. That record helped get her noticed by Nashville producer Billy Sherrill, who signed her to CBS/Sony Nashville, at which time she adopted the name Lacy J. Dalton, taken from the famous outlaws of the Old West. Her first single, "Crazy Blue Eyes" debuted in 1979 and immediately went to the Top 20 and helped get her named Best New Artist by the Country Music Association. A string of several hit singles through 1984 kept Dalton and her band, the Dalton Gang, one of the busiest live acts on the country music circuit. Dalton's popularity began to wane in the late 1980s, and in 1992 she moved to Capitol Records where she cut an additional four albums.

Highlights of this show include her 1982 hit, "Taking It Easy;" the spunky "Hillbilly Girl;" "Wide Eyed and Willin,'" and her cover of Roy Orbison's "Sweet Dreams Baby." She does a great version of "Crazy Blue Eyes," the song she co-wrote with Mary McFadden which launched her career in country music. "You Can't Take The Texas Out Of Me" a classic Western Swing tribute, is another high point, as is "Dixie Devil," a great country rocker she wrote for Charlie Daniels.