Thursday, October 16, 2008

The Unreleased Recordings Press Release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE



The Historic Hank Williams Box Set From Time Life The Unreleased Recordings Scheduled To Street October 28th

Phenomenal Early Response To These Recordings From 1951 Includes; Newsweek, Rolling Stone, People Magazine, National Public Radio, Associated Press, AARP Magazine, Hits Magazine, LA Times, Country Weekly, CMT, GAC, Etc.


Fairfax, VA (October 16, 2008) ---- The most highly anticipated project of 2008, Hank Williams The Unreleased Recordings, will hit retail stores on Tuesday, October 28th. The first installment showcases fifty-four of the 143 recordings of Williams’ performances on the 1951WSM radio show sponsored by Mother Best’s Flour. The additional eighty-nine songs will be released in separate installments during the next three years, with fans getting to hear Hank as never before.

The first installment features Hank Williams performing exciting, new versions of his classic hits including, “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry,” “Cold, Cold Heart,” and “Hey, Good Lookin’,” as well as songs he never recorded commercially including, “Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain,” “Cherokee Boogie,” and “Cool Water.” On the CDs, Williams gives some insight about the songs and with “On Top of Old Smoky,” he explains this was a song he learned from his grandmother singing it in the original, mournful Appalachian style instead of the more upbeat version of the 1951 radio hit and campfire singalong. The project gives the listener an intimate experience with Williams that has never been possible before. It’s almost like inviting Willliams into your living room and getting a rare snapshot of who he was in 1951.

Media has enthusiastically embraced the project with upcoming coverage in Newsweek, People magazine, AARP magazine, National Pubic Radio/Weekend Edition Saturday with Scott Simon, Rolling Stone, Los Angeles Times, Tennessean, New York Daily News, New York Times, Hits magazine, Alternative Press, Philadelphia Inquirer, CMT Insider, CMT.com, GAC/Master Series, Country Weekly, to name a few.

“This is a once in a lifetime event in music history,” says Mike Jason, Time Life, Senior Vice President, Audio & Video Retail. “We have the unique opportunity to present deeply personal, never before available, high quality recordings from the father of Country music, Hank Williams.
The fact that the music survived all these years, despite almost being lost a few times, makes our ability to share them all the more gratifying. When we have released all the songs, Hank’s available catalog of work will be increased by 50%.”

“These recordings are such a great snapshot of my dad, Hank Williams,” says his daughter, Jett Williams. “It shows his personality and the great sense of humor he had and spotlights him singing his classics during one take in a radio studio. For fans, it will be like a trip back to 1951 and a chance for them, and me, to really get to know the total man that was country music’s first superstar.”

In 1951, Williams was at the pinnacle of his career as several top pop vocalists, including Tony Bennett and Perry Como, covered his mega-hit, “Cold, Cold Heart.” He also appeared on major national television shows including The Perry Como Show and the last great medicine show, the Hadacol Caravan, where he topped the bill over Bob Hope and Milton Berle. Those appearances transformed Williams from a regional Country artist into a national super-star. Since his death in 1953, Williams has risen in popularity to become one of most iconic figures in all of American music.

Time Life and the Time Life logo are registered trademarks of Time Warner Inc. and affiliated companies, used under license by Direct Holdings Americas Inc., which is not affiliated with Time Warner Inc. or Time Inc. Headquartered in Fairfax VA, Direct Holdings Americas Inc.'s history began in 1961 as a direct marketing division of Time Incorporated specializing in music and books. The business has been operated as a separate company since the mid-1970s when it relocated to Virginia, and has since grown to become one of the world’s largest direct marketers of audio and video products throughout North America, Europe and Australia. The Company has set the standard in the direct response industry by pioneering direct marketing techniques and building one of the most trusted and recognized brands in commerce. The Company now also sells its products through major traditional and non-traditional retailers around the world as well as via the Internet. The Company was sold in 2003 to private investors.
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Friday, October 10, 2008

Newsweek/Rolling Stone

Newsweek has set up an interview session and photo shoot for Jett Williams.  And Rolling Stone is featuring an interview in the Rock Section of its October issue.   

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Special Guest Blogger Colin Escott to join Hank Blog

Over the next few months Hank expert Colin Escott will write a series of entries focusing on the release. In addition to writing the liner notes, "Colin is the author of Good Rockin' Tonight: The Story of Sun Records, Hank Williams: The Biography and an anthology of music journalism, Tattooed on Their Tongues. He co-wrote and co-produced the PBS/BBC documentary Hank Williams Honky Tonk Blues."

Please send in topics you want Colin to address by clicking the 'comments' option below to post or click here and it'll take you right to it. 

Also feel free to share your own Hank knowlege in the Hank Google Groups

Have your say!

People Magazine

People Magazine will feature The Unreleased Recordings box set in its Country issue in November.

Monday, October 6, 2008

New Track Available!

A new track from The Unreleased Recordings is available in the player above. A track called "I Can't Help It If I'm Still In Love With You."

What do you think?

Media Picking up Billboard Story

Yahoo, Reuters, and MSNBC picked up on the Billboard store.

MSNBC link

Billboard Feature

Billboard 9/26/08

Deal Paves Way For Hank Williams Treasure Trove


Hank Williams

September 26, 2008 , 11:00 AM ET

Ken Tucker, Nashville

It took a fortuitous find and years of legal wrangling, but some of Hank Williams' lesser-known recordings will soon be available for mass consumption. "The Unreleased Recordings" includes performances from the "Mother's Best Flour" radio program, which Williams hosted on the legendary WSM-AM Nashville in 1951.

Time Life will release the 143 recordings in various packages in the next three years through an exclusive agreement with the Williams estate. The first set is due Oct. 28.

Williams and his band prerecorded 72 shows to run while they were on tour. The shows were recorded on 16-inch acetate discs that were later thrown into the trash during a station move in the '60s but salvaged by WSM employee Les Leverett.

In the '80s, Jerry Rivers, who played fiddle for Williams as part of the Drifting Cowboy Band and later backed daughter Jett Williams, told her about the "Mother's Best" show. He then introduced her to Leverett, who turned over the original acetates.

But getting the rights to the music wasn't simple. "I had possession of the acetates but they had already been duplicated way before I had entered the picture," Williams says.

Indeed they had. PolyGram Records claimed exclusive rights relying on Williams' contract with its predecessor in interest, MGM Records. Meanwhile, Legacy Entertainment claimed rights to the recordings under a chain of title. At one point Leverett had assigned his rights to former Drifting Cowboy Hillous Butrum, who had in turn sold them to Legacy, which had actually replaced the Drifting Cowboys with another band on its version. A series of courts eventually ruled in favor of the Williams estate, ending an eight-year legal battle.

Williams says that even devotees of her father's music will find something new here. "Unless you were listening that morning in 1951, you've never heard that version of 'Cold, Cold Heart,' " she says. "You may have heard the master, but you've never heard the Feb. 3, 1951, version of Hank Williams singing it.

"The fidelity of these recordings are better than his MGM masters," she says. "These have not been enhanced or tinkered with. It's as if it was 1951 and my dad was recording it right then. It was a one-time take."

In addition to Williams' best-known material, the recordings include 40 songs he was never known to have performed and others he never recorded commercially, including "Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain," "Cherokee Boogie" and "On Top of Old Smoky."