1. Ballad of Davy Crockett - Blackburn, Tom 2. Don't Take Your Guns to Town - Cash, Johnny 3. Big Iron - Robbins, Marty 4. The Ballad of Paladin - Boone, Richard 5. El Paso - Robbins, Marty 6. Cross the Brazos at Waco - Arnold, K.C. 7. Long Black Veil - Dill, Danny 8. Life to Go - Jones, George [1] 9. Big Bad John - Acuff, Roy 10. Tennessee Flat Top Box - Cash, Johnny 11. Wolverton Mountain - Kilgore, Merle 12. Saginaw, Michigan - Anderson, Bill [1] 13. North to Alaska - Franks, Tillman 14. Twenty Miles From Shore - Graves, Bob 15. The Battle of New Orleans - Driftwood, Jimmie 16. Soldier's Joy - Driftwood, Jimmie 17. Waterloo - Loudermilk, John D. 18. The Ballad of Jed Clampett - Henning, Paul 19. May the Bird of Paradise Fly up Your Nose - Merritt, Neal 20. Flowers on the Wall - DeWitt, Lew 21. If You Can't Bite, Don't Growl - Collins, Tommy 22. A Boy Named Sue - Silverstein, Shel 23. The Devil Went Down to Georgia - Crain, Tom 24. Pancho and Lefty - VanZandt, Townes 25. Highwayman - Webb, Jimmy [1]
Columbia Country Classics 3: Americana
- Audio CD: 0 pages (2008-02-01)
- Publisher: SBME SPECIAL MKTS.
- Label: SBME SPECIAL MKTS.
- Studio: SBME SPECIAL MKTS.
- Average Customer Review:
based on 8 reviews
- Sales Rank in Music: #37423
Avg. Customer Review:
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: Excellent tunes at an excellent bargain!! 2008-10-10
Comment: I glommed onto this CD 10 years ago, when it was selling for $10-- I thought it was a bargain then, and at Amazon's price, it's even more so now! I was only looking for the hard-to-find Ballad of Paladin. I was delighted to discover it came with a whole passel of other treasures as well! (Is any record collection truly complete without Fess Parker?) A lot of these are those great old country-western ballads that people of my age pretended not to like--they were the old man's music, not rock n' roll. But secretly, we knew they were great stuff! My only caveat: the version of Big Bad John is still the "clean" one. It was 35 years later when someone alerted me that Jimmy originally cut one where he described BBJ as "one hell of a man." But hardly would play it. Les autres temps...Still, a great addition!
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: Wonderful 2007-10-01
Comment: Enjoyed this on a cassett many years ago. Glad to find it on a CD.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: Replacement 2002-04-03
Comment: Years ago while I was overseas in the army I bought this tape and have enjoyed it very much. The tape has become old and worn and since I now have a computer the that plays CDs, personal CD player, CD player in my truck, and etc. I bought it on CD so I can continue to enjoy it for years to come. Don't be fooled this CD can be enjoyed by any and everybody of all ages. I am 35 yrs. old but I also own CDs by Britney Spears, NSYNC, CCR, Backstreet Boys,the Eagles, B.B. King, Christina Aguilera, and many others and I enjoy all of them. If you enjoy the samples you well enjoy the whole album.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: What became of Ellie May? Did she enter a convent? 2001-01-24
Comment: Columbia has released a series of CDs paying tribute to the Country Classics, volume 3 of which is entitled AMERICANA and contains twenty-five so called "saga songs", i.e. numbers which put to music stories of good vs. adversity.This disk features a veritable posse of legendary artists. Johnny Cash is the most represented ("Don't Take Your Guns to Town", "Tennessee Flat Top Box", "A Boy Named Sue", "Highwayman" - the last with Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson and Kris Kristofferson). Others with more than one track are Marty Robbins ("Big Iron", "El Paso"), Hawkshaw Hawkins ("Twenty Miles from Shore", "Soldier's Joy"), and Stonewall Jackson ("Life to Go", "Waterloo"). Then, there are my favorites: "The Ballad of Davy Crockett" (Fess Parker) makes me yearn for the coonskin cap I had as a kid. It'd look mighty fine at the big management meeting. (Actually, I think it was rabbit fur.) I'd probably run afoul of PETA, though. And who needs that hassle? "Big Bad John" (Jimmy Dean) reminds me of the hero I once aspired to be. Unfortunately, real, everyday life is pretty much mundane. Besides, there are no mines locally, and sewer work doesn't have quite the same cachet. Even though I love just about everything British (except Lemon Shandy), "The Battle of New Orleans" (Johnny Horton) is a real toe-tapper. Makes me want to dump tea into Los Angeles harbor. In your eye, Tony! The next time I have to pay my IRS taxes, perhaps playing for them "May the Bird of Paradise Fly Up Your Nose" ("Little" Jimmy Dickens) would get a more warm `n' fuzzy response. Hmm ... maybe not. Lastly, "The Ballad of Jed Clampett" (Lester Flatt, Earl Scruggs and the Foggy Mountain Boys) brings to mind Ellie May sunbathing out by the CEEment Pond. Let's dwell on that vision for a long moment. Dang, Uncle Jed! (If you haven't a clue as to what I'm blathering on about here, then forget it, as you're too young to appreciate this CD anyway.) My only regret concerning this collection of down-home favorites is that the catchy theme from "Green Acres" isn't included. Pity. I was hoping to sing along.
1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: The Absolute best! 2000-10-25
Comment: A must have for all true country music fans. It has the ballads and songs of the best bygone era in country music. Buy this and enjoy!
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