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Don't Let the Stars Get in Your Eyes
- Artist: Skeets McDonald
- Format: CD
- Release Date: 11/25/1998

Don't Let the Stars Get in Your Eyes
- Artist: Skeets McDonald
- Format: CD
- Release Date: 11/25/1998
- Artist: Skeets McDonald
- Label: Bear Family
- Number of Discs: 5
- UPC: 4000127159373
- Item #: BCD59372
- Genre: Country, Box Sets
- Release Date: 11/25/1998
- This product is a special order
CD
List Price: $149.99
Price: $108.15
You Save: $41.84 (28%)

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Product Notes
One of the pioneers of West Coast country music and an archetypal honky tonk singer, Skeets McDonald is chiefly remembered for his 1953 hit Don't Let The Stars Get In Your Eyes. Over an 18-year recording career from 1949 to 1967, though, he recorded 143 songs. All of them are in this long-overdue complete career retrospective. Taken together, Skeets' output not only shows how country music changed over two decades, but how one man could rise above the trends to make simply great beerhall country music.
Born in Arkansas, Skeets' recording career began in Detroit, cutting risque jukebox hits like The Tattooed Lady and Birthday Cake Boogie. He moved to the west coast in 1951. Signed immediately to Capitol, he helped define Bakersfield-styled country music, recording classics like I'm Hurtin' (later recorded by Nat 'King' Cole) and Looking At The Moon And Wishing On A Star, as well as Don't Let The Stars Get In Your Eyes. He later turned to rockabilly with You Oughta See Grandma Rock and Heartbreakin' Mama (both featuring Eddie Cochran on guitar). His fabulous 1958 Capitol LP, 'Goin' Steady With The Blues' (featuring Buck Owens and Joe Maphis on guitar) is widely acknowledged as one of the great Fifties country albums. In 1959, Skeets moved to Columbia Records where he recorded Ray Price-styled shuffles for a few years (several of them actually featuring Price on harmony vocals) before scoring another major hit in 1963 with Call Me Mister Brown. The set is rounded out with his last recordings for Uni, made shortly before his death in 1968. A newly-researched biography by Colin Escott and photos and ephemera from family, friends, and fans complete this long-overdue retrospective of a Post-War country music pioneer... and one of the best pure singers in country music history.Credits
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Performer(s)Alfred E. Kern
Allen Williams
Benny Walker
Bill Woods
Billy Strange
Buddy Emmons
Buddy Harman
Charles Butler
Clarence "Bud" Dooley
David Cavanaugh
Donald Robertson
Douglas Briley
Dudley Brooks
Floyd Cramer
Grady Martin
Hank Garland
Hargus "Pig" Robbins
Harold Bradley
Helen O'Connell
Herman "The Hermit" Snyder
Ivy J. "Jimmy" Bryant
Jimmy Day
Joe Zinkan
John W. Greubel
Johnny White
Joyce "Red" Murrell
Jules Jacobs
Karl Garvin
Marion Z. "Pee Wee" Adams
Merle Travis
Meyer Rubin
Milton Curtis "Muddy" Berry
Murray Harman, Jr.
Pete Drake
Ray Edenton
Roy Harte
Roy Huskey Jr.
Roy Nichols
Walter Haynes
Walter P. "Pete" Candoli
Wesley Webb West
William Edward "Billy" Liebert
William Everett Strange
William K. McElhiney
William Whitney Pursell
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Producer(s)Cliffie Stone
Don Law
Frank Jones
Ken Nelson
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Artist(s)Skeets McDonald
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Composer(s)Tex Ritter