THE LEGACY OF BILL GRAHAM
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The Oak Ridge Boys

Sample this concert
  1. 1Instrumental Intro03:58
  2. 2Sail Away02:20
  3. 3Come On In01:47
  4. 4Dig A Little Deeper In The Well02:26
  5. 5Dream On03:26
  6. 6Trying To Love Two Women / Wish You Could Have Turned My Head03:06
  7. 7I Guess It Never Hurts To Hurt Sometimes04:32
  8. 8Fancy Free03:49
  9. 9She's Not Just Another Pretty Face03:41
  10. 10Dancing The Night Away04:31
  11. 11You're The One04:01
  12. 12Band Chatter / Intros01:58
  13. 13I Am Over You, You're Over Me03:53
  14. 14Leaving Louisiana In The Broad Daylight02:58
  15. 15Would They Love Him Down In Shreveport?02:27
  16. 16Y'All Come Back Saloon03:26
  17. 17Love Song03:56
  18. 18Ozark Mountain Jubilee03:33
  19. 19In The Pines02:22
  20. 20Ain't No Cure For The Rock And Roll03:09
  21. 21Thank God For Kids03:47
  22. 22American Made02:35
  23. 23Elvira03:18
  24. 24Bobbie Sue04:43
Liner Notes

Duane Allen - baritone vocals; Joe Bonsall - tenor vocals; William Lee Golden - baritone vocals; Richard Sterban - bass vocals; Skip Mitchell - lead guitar; Steve Sanders - rhythm guitar, vocals; Mark O'Hunt -guitar; Fred Satterfield - drums; Don Greeland - bass; Dewey Duro - sax, harmonica; Ron Fairchild - keyboards

When it comes to musical acts, you can't get any more American than the Oak Ridge Boys. Icons in the Midwest, and among the biggest country acts of the 70s and 80s, the Oaks have become the musical equivalent of baseball, apple pie, and mom. During this show, recorded in November of 1983, they even point out a baseball hero who happened to be in the audience, pitching coach for the San Francisco Giants Herm Sterett, who was coaching the Phillies in 1980, when they won the World Series.

But with introductions and pleasant chatter aside, it has always been about presenting an entertaining live show filled with years of hit songs, among them "Dig A Little Deeper In The Well," "You're The One," "Y'All Come Back Saloon," "Ozark Mountain Jubilee," "Bobbie Sue," and, of course, "Elvira."

The Oak Ridge Boys actually date back to 1942 in Knoxville, Tennessee, where they began as a gospel group led by Wally Fowler called the Oak Ridge Quartet. Fowler kept the group going amid several personnel changes as one of the most popular country-gospel acts in the South through 1956, when he retired. In 1956, he sold the name to then-group member Smitty Gatlin, who changed the moniker to the Oak Ridge Boys in 1961. When Gatlin became a minister in 1964, he handed over the reigns to the other members, which at that point included William Lee Golden and Duane Allen. Golden and Allen gradually rebuilt the group into its current line up, which has been together since the early 1970s.