Frankie Laine - Gunfight At The O.K. Corral - 1957 (1991)

Posted By: mfrwiz

Frankie Laine - Gunfight At The O.K. Corral - 1957 (1991)
WavPack (Img + Cue + Log + Audio Identifier Report Included): 232 Mb | EAC Secure Mode Rip | Mp3 (320 kbps): 112 Mb | 800 DPI Complete Scans: 58 Mb | Rar Files (3% Recovery)
Audio CD (1991) - Number of Discs: 1 - Label: Starlite - Catalog Number: CDS 51111 - Source: My Own CD Collection
Oldies, Vintage Country


Frankie Laine Biography: Frankie Laine, born Francesco Paolo LoVecchio (Chicago, March 30, 1913 – San Diego, February 6, 2007), was a successful American singer, songwriter and actor whose career spanned 75 years, from his first concerts in 1930 with a marathon dance company to his final performance of "That's My Desire" in 2005. Often billed as America's Number One Song Stylist, his other nicknames include Mr. Rhythm, Old Leather Lungs, and Mr. Steel Tonsils. His hits included "That's My Desire", "That Lucky Old Sun", "Mule Train", "Cry of the Wild Goose", "Jezebel", "High Noon", "I Believe", "Hey Joe!", "The Kid's Last Fight", "Cool Water", "Moonlight Gambler", "Love is a Golden Ring", "Rawhide", and "Lord, You Gave Me a Mountain". He sang well-known theme songs for many movie Western soundtracks, including 3:10 To Yuma, Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, and Blazing Saddles, although he was not a country & western singer. Laine sang an eclectic variety of song styles and genres, stretching from big band crooning to pop, western-themed songs, gospel, rock, folk, jazz and blues. He did not sing the soundtrack song for High Noon, which was sung by Tex Ritter, but his own version (with somewhat altered lyrics, omitting the name of the antagonist, Frank Miller) was the one that became a bigger hit.


Though his influence proved less durable than his record sales, Frankie Laine was one of the most popular vocalists of the 1950s, swinging jazz standards as well as half a dozen Western movie themes of the time with his manly baritone. Laine's somewhat artificial Western nature proved more successful in far-off England, where he set two chart records in 1953: his version of "I Believe" stayed at number one in the U.K. for an incredible 18 weeks, and his two subsequent chart-toppers that year ("Hey Joe," "Answer Me") set a record by putting Laine at number one for 27 weeks during the year. Born in Chicago in 1913, Laine sang in the local church choir and first performed professionally at the age of 15. He moved to nightclubs by his later high-school years and began traveling around the country, performing as a singing waiter and dance instructor in addition to menial labor such as car sales and machinist work. Laine moved up a rung in 1937, when he replaced Perry Como in a regional big band led by Freddy Carlone. Laine was back on his own by the mid-'40s, but a stirring rendition of Hoagy Carmichael's "Rockin' Chair" performed one night when Carmichael was himself in the audience proved to be the young singer's break.


Carmichael found him a job at Hollywood's Vine Street Club and funded Laine's first recording session; his instincts proved to be spot-on, since one of the tracks, "We'll Be Together," became quite popular after Laine signed with Mercury Records in 1945. "That's My Desire" hit number four in the American charts two years later, and Laine re-entered the Top Ten in 1948 with "Shine." He hit the big time the following year, with two huge number one hits, "That Lucky Old Sun" and "Mule Train." Another chart-topper, 1950's "The Cry of the Wild Goose," was his last for Mercury, and he signed with Columbia just one year later. Laine's Columbia career saw him move toward husky country & western pop with arrangements and orchestra conduction by Mitch Miller, the vocal pop impresario who produced some of the most schmaltzy pop music of the 1950s (and recorded it as well, in a series of Sing-Along with Mitch Miller LPs). Laine succumbed to Miller's machinations soon enough, and even though his debut Columbia single, "Jezebel"/"Rose, Rose, I Love You," was a double-sided Top Five hit, he never again reached number one in America. Instead, he settled for consistent Top Ten placings during the early '50s, with "Hey, Good Lookin'," "Jealousy (Jalousie)," "High Noon," "I Believe," and "Tell Me a Story." Laine proved to be far more popular in Great Britain and Europe than America during this time, and after his last American Top Ten hit ("Love Is a Golden Ring" in 1957), he turned to lavish cabaret tours that crisscrossed the world and found him turning to increasingly inspirational and religious material. He retired to his home in California during the mid-'80s. He passed away from heart failure on February 6, 2007. ~ John Bush, All Music Guide

* Born: March 30, 1913, Chicago, IL
* Died: February 06, 2007, San Diego, CA
* Active: '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s
* Genres: Vocal Music
* Instrument: Vocals
* Representative Albums: "Collection", "16 Most Requested Songs", "The Frankie Laine Collection: The Mercury Years"
* Representative Songs: "Jezebel", "Mule Train", "Moonlight Gambler"

Note: Sound Quality: 7/10


Track Listing:

01 - Gunfight At The O.K. Corral - 2:07
02 - High Noon (Do Not Forsake Me) - 2:46
03 - Mule Train - 2:33
04 - Riders In The Sky - 3:08
05 - Rawhide - 2:01
06 - Blowing Wild (The Ballad Of Black Gold) - 2:37
07 - Jealousy - 3:13
08 - Moonlight Gambler - 2:51
09 - Rose Rose I Love You - 2:27
10 - Granada - 2:47
11 - Jezebel - 3:16
12 - Rain, Rain, Rain - 2:53
13 - Answer Me (Mutterlein) - 2:38
14 - The Rock Of Gibraltar - 2:41
15 - I Believe - 2:09
16 - On The Sunny Side Of The Street - 2:33
17 - That Lucky Old Sun - 3:32
18 - Hummingbird - 2:24



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Exact Audio Copy V0.99 prebeta 5 from 4. May 2009

EAC extraction logfile from 14. April 2010, 22:44

Frankie Lane / Gunfight At The O.K. Corral

Used drive : PLEXTOR DVDR PX-830SA Adapter: 9 ID: 0

Read mode : Secure
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Additional command line options : -hmx3 -w "Year=%y" -w "Genre=%m" %s %d


TOC of the extracted CD

Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector
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1 | 0:00.33 | 2:07.37 | 33 | 9594
2 | 2:07.70 | 2:46.25 | 9595 | 22069
3 | 4:54.20 | 2:32.50 | 22070 | 33519
4 | 7:26.70 | 3:08.13 | 33520 | 47632
5 | 10:35.08 | 2:01.00 | 47633 | 56707
6 | 12:36.08 | 2:36.50 | 56708 | 68457
7 | 15:12.58 | 3:13.00 | 68458 | 82932
8 | 18:25.58 | 2:51.00 | 82933 | 95757
9 | 21:16.58 | 2:27.37 | 95758 | 106819
10 | 23:44.20 | 2:46.50 | 106820 | 119319
11 | 26:30.70 | 3:15.50 | 119320 | 133994
12 | 29:46.45 | 2:53.13 | 133995 | 146982
13 | 32:39.58 | 2:37.50 | 146983 | 158807
14 | 35:17.33 | 2:41.37 | 158808 | 170919
15 | 37:58.70 | 2:09.25 | 170920 | 180619
16 | 40:08.20 | 2:33.00 | 180620 | 192094
17 | 42:41.20 | 3:31.63 | 192095 | 207982
18 | 46:13.08 | 2:23.50 | 207983 | 218757


Range status and errors

Selected range

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Peak level 76.0 %
Range quality 99.9 %
Copy CRC 962F1F14
Copy OK

No errors occurred


AccurateRip summary

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None of the tracks are present in the AccurateRip database

End of status report