Details / Tracklist: |
1.1 Dreaming with My Eyes Open1.2 What's It to You1.3 The Silence Speaks for Itself1.4 How to Make a Man Lonesome1.5 Next Step in Love1.6 White Palace1.7 Money Can't Buy (The Love We Had)1.8 Things I Should Have Said1.9 Where Do I Fit in the Picture1.10 Live Until I Die1.11 I Don't Know How Love Starts1.12 If I Could Make a Living1.13 The Melrose Avenue Cinema Two1.14 My Heart Will Never Know1.15 What Do You Want for Nothin'1.16 This Woman and This Man1.17 Boogie Till the Cows Come Home1.18 Heartache Highway1.19 You Make It Look So Easy1.20 Lose Your Memory1.21 Money Ain't Everything1.22 Down By the Riverside2.1 Who Needs You Baby2.2 I Won't Have the Heart2.3 Let Me Take That Heartache (Off Your Hands)2.4 Hypnotize the Moon2.5 Hand Me Down Heart2.6 Only on Days That End in 'Y'2.7 Where Were You2.8 Loving You Comes Naturally to Me2.9 Bury the Shovel2.10 A Cowboy's Toughest Ride2.11 Love Me Like You Love Me2.12 Rumor Has It2.13 One, Two, I Love You2.14 I'd Say That's Right2.15 Heart Over Head Over Heels2.16 Watch This2.17 You'll Never Hear the End of It2.18 Country Boy and City Girl2.19 I Need a Margarita2.20 That's Us2.21 Then What |
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Number of discs: |
1 |
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Description: | Two CD set containing Clay Walker's first four Platinum-selling albums from 1993 to 1997. Contains 16 hit singles including six Number Ones. Combined, these albums spent a total of 276 weeks on the American country charts. Clay Walker signed with Giant Records in 1993 and remained with the label until it closed it's doors in 2001 making him it's biggest and fastest-selling country artist during the label's 11-year history. Born Ernest Clayton Walker on 19th August 1969 in Beaumont, Texas, the same Gulf of Mexico town best known in country music history for launching the career of George Jones, but also, in more recent times, as the birthplace of Mark Chesnutt and Tracy Byrd. When George Strait launched his career and, ignoring his record label's advice, wore a cowboy hat, he opened up the doorway for a new movement in country music; "Hat Acts". Some were, as Strait was himself, genuine cowboys who wore Stetsons as part of their everyday dress, others were imitators obviously hopping on to the bandwagon. Clay Walker was the genuine article. |
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No. of tracks: |
43 |
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Manufacturer No.: |
QMRLL103D |
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Product Safety
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Bertus Musikvertrieb Bertus Musikvertrieb Akeleibaan 59, 2908 KA Capelle aan den Ijssel, NL service@bertus.com |
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