Another of my favorite singers is Slim Whitman (I just joined SwapACD and I'm browsing).
I remember I used to listen to his LP, All My Best, at home. And his cassettes at work (in the dungeon of the bank).
He is perhaps most well known to movie fans for his Indian Love Call prominently featured in the storyline of the movie Mars Attacks!
I particularly remember the song Please Help Me I'm Falling (that I remember Barbara would sing along these first five words). It was on the cassette Country Classics. Among many others, like Rose Marie.
Unfortunately neither All My Best nor Country Classics are available on CD. Though it sure sounds like a lot of these songs, if not all, are in the box set I'm A Lonely Wanderer. [I'm listening to the amazon music samples as I write this.] The reviewer says it goes along with the Rose Marie box set. So taken together that's 336 songs (173+163) on 13 (7+6) CDs of Slim Whitman. I guess that would probably be enough for most people.
Here's a pretty cool site that I just found via google, MusicMoz. It has a comprehensive discography. Man, that's a lot of albums.
[11/11/12] Youtube to the rescue. Fans have created and uploaded videos of millions songs. It's the new napster (so who knows how long it'll be up). So I made a Slim Whitman playlist with the songs from Country Classics and All My Best. The only song missing is Let Me Call You Sweetheart (they were forced to remove the video). Enjoy it while you can.
[8/13/13] I was updating my Slim Whitman playlist since a lot of videos have been deleted (and some more recently uploaded). Googling, I found that Mr. Whitman passed away in June at the age of 90. RIP. Here's an obituary from Rolling Stone.
Slim Whitman, one of country music's most unusual artists, died today in Orange Park, Florida, of heart failure, Billboard reports.
He was 90. Whitman, born Ottis Dewey Whitman, Jr., and his high-flying
falsetto and yodeling prowess intrigued fans for decades, helping him to
sell millions of records in his career.
Whitman was born in Tampa, Florida, but didn't pursue music
professionally until he returned from serving in the Navy during World
War II. He kicked off his career with the Variety Rhythm Boys, and was
heard by future Elvis Presley manager Tom Parker. With the help of
Parker, Whitman landed a record deal with RCA Victor and released his
first single in 1948. The singer found his first big success in 1952,
landing Top 10 hits with songs like "Indian Love Call" and "Keep It a
Secret."
Whitman would score a big hit in the U.K. with his recording of "Rose
Marie," taking the top spot on the charts for 11 weeks. But it would be
six years until he'd have another charting single, with "The Bells That
Broke My Heart" peaking at Number 30 in 1961. His career hit a new
stride in 1965 with "More than Yesterday," and Whitman would land 22
singles on the charts through 1974. His track "Something to Remember"
rose to Number Six on the charts in 1971.
In 1979, Whitman jumped on a then-new concept with the mail-order TV album. His compilation All My Best,
his first mail-order TV album, sold more than 1.5 million copies.
Whitman charted another hit in 1980 with "When," and made his first
appearance on Johnny Carson's Tonight Show.
His influence continued to resonate decades later, with Michael Jackson, Paul McCartney and George Harrison calling him a favorite. Films like 1996's Mars Attacks! and 2007's Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story have also included Whitman references.
Whitman released his latest album, Twilight on the Trail, in 2010. He is survived by a son and daughter; Alma, his wife of 67 years, died in 2009.
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