Jimmie Dale Gilmore (born May 6, 1945) is an American country singer, songwriter, actor, recording artist and producer, currently living in Austin, Texas.
Biography
Gilmore is a native of the Texas Panhandle, having been born in Amarillo, Texas, and raised in Lubbock, Texas. His earliest musical influence was Hank Williams and the honky tonk brand of country music that his father played. In the 1950s, he was exposed to the emerging rock and roll of other Texans such as Roy Orbison and Lubbock native Buddy Holly, as well as to Johnny Cash. He was profoundly influenced in the 1960s by The Beatles and Bob Dylan and the folk music and blues revival in that decade.
With Joe Ely and Butch Hancock, Gilmore founded The Flatlanders. The group has been performing on and off since 1972. The band's first recording project, from the early 1970s, was barely distributed. It has since been acknowledged, through Rounder's 1991 reissue (More a Legend Than a Band), as a milestone of progressive, alternative country. The three friends continued to reunite for occasional Flatlanders performances, and in May 2002 released a long-awaited follow-up album, Now Again, on New West Records.
The best-known recording was released in October 1956 by Guy Mitchell and spent ten weeks at number 1 on the U.S. Billboard chart from December 8, 1956, to February 2, 1957. An example of the U.S. recording is on Columbia #40769, dated 1956, with the Ray Conniff Orchestra. Mitchell's version was also number 1 in the UK Singles Chart for three (non-consecutive) weeks in early 1957, one of only four singles to return to number 1 on three separate occasions, with the other three being "I Believe" by Frankie Laine, "Happy" by Pharrell Williams and "What Do You Mean?" by Justin Bieber.
Marty Robbins and Tommy Steele versions
Two other charting versions of the song were released almost simultaneously with Mitchell's, one by the English singer Tommy Steele (with the Steelmen) and the other (recorded before Mitchell covered it) by US country singer Marty Robbins.
Connee herself is widely considered one of the greatest jazz female vocalists and was a major influence on Ella Fitzgerald who said, "My mother brought home one of her records, and I fell in love with it....I tried so hard to sound just like her."
In 1936, Connee's sisters retired and Connee continued on as a solo artist (having also recorded solos during her years with the group).
The Boswells came to be well known locally while still in their early teens, making appearances in New Orleans theaters and radio. They made their first recordings for Victor Records in 1925, which included "Cryin' Blues" where Connee is featured singing in the style of her early influence, the African American singer Mamie Smith. (She also credited opera singer Enrico Caruso as one of her influences.) The Boswell Sisters became stage professionals that year when they were tapped to fill in for an act at New Orleans' Orpheum Theatre. They received an invitation to come to Chicago and perform in 1928 and honed their act on the Western Vaudeville Circuit. When their tour ended they traveled to San Francisco. The hotel that had been recommended had a less than savory reputation, and the man at the desk suggested that these three young ladies might be better off in another hotel. That man, Harry Leedy, would later become their manager on a handshake and become a permanent part of Connee's life as her husband. Harry was also part owner of Decca Records.
Jimmie Dale is a fictional character created by Frank L. Packard in 1914.
Fictional biography
He was a wealthy playboy by day, but at night put on a costume and became The Gray Seal, who enters businesses or homes and cracks safes, always leaving a diamond shaped, gray paper "seal" behind to mark his conquest, but never taking anything. He was just doing it for "the sheer deviltry of it" at first, but when a woman catches him she blackmails him to war on certain crime organizations.
Appearances
Books
Dale's adventures first appeared in People's Magazine and then were collected into novels: The Adventures of Jimmie Dale (1917), The Further Adventures of Jimmie Dale (1919), Jimmie Dale and the Phantom Clue (1922), Jimmie Dale and the Blue Envelope Murder (1930), and Jimmie Dale and the Missing Hour (1935), with the serializations generally appearing the year before the novel version was published.
In 2007, the first two books featuring Jimmie Dale/The Gray Seal were re-released as an e-book entitled Return of The Gray Seal.
Singing The Blues by the late Arizona songwriter Marty Robbins
Lyrics:
Well, I never felt more like singin' the blues
'Cause I never thought that I'd ever lose
Your love dear, why'd you do me this way
Well, I never felt more like cryin' all night
'Cause everything's wrong, there ain't nothin' right
With-out you, you got me singin' the blues.
Now the moon and stars no longer shine
The dream is gone I thought was mine
There's nothin' left for me to do
But cry-why-why over you
Well, I never felt more like runnin' away
But how can I go when I couldn't stay
With-out you, you got me singin' the blues.
Well the moon and stars no longer shine
And the dream is gone that I thought was mine
There's nothin' left for me to do
But cry-why-why over you
Well, I never felt more like runnin' away
But how c...
published: 28 Dec 2008
Guy Mitchell - Singing the blues (1956)
Writer: Melvin Endsley ●
Releasing date: October 1956 [Usa]; December 1956 [UK] ●
Format: 7" single ●
Label: Columbia (4-40769) [Usa]; Philips (JK 1001) [UK] ●
B-side: "Crazy with love" ●
Chart positions: #1 Billboard [Usa]; #1 UK charts ●
Recording: with Ray Conniff & His Orchestra ●
Other versions: Black Oak Arkansas; Johnny Burnette; Eddie Condon; Gail Davies; Jason Eddy & the Centremen; Dave Edmunds; Bill Haley & The Comets; Burl Ives; Bert Jansch; Kentucky Headhunters; Jerry Lee Lewis; Dean Martin; The Mills Brothers; Daniel O'Donnell; Marie Osmond; Cliff Richard & The Shadows; Gene Summers; Vivian Vance & William Frawley ●
NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT INTENDED. Pictures and music belong to their respective owners. I don't own or claim to own it. Can and will remove on reques...
published: 06 Feb 2012
Singing the blues (Glasgow Rangers song)
Song celebrating Rangers victory over Celtic
Rangers 5 Celtic 1
1988
published: 02 May 2018
Singing the Blues
Provided to YouTube by TuneCore
Singing the Blues · Positive Motion
Take You Higher
℗ 2011 Afakasi Unlimited c/o Robert Sterling Music Publishing
Released on: 2011-08-18
Auto-generated by YouTube.
published: 08 Aug 2019
Guy Mitchell - Singing the blues (1956).mpg
published: 15 Feb 2010
cliff richard & the shadows ••• singing the blues
"brand new song" - singing the blues •
Cliff Richard & The Shadows, afscheidsconcert "the final reunion"
published: 23 Jun 2011
Paul McCartney ~ Singing the Blues 1991 (w/subtitles) [HQ]
From Paul's performance on MTV UNPLUGGED on 25 January 1991. The song can be found on his album UNPLUGGED: THE OFFICIAL BOOTLEG released in May 1991.
Link to Paul's performance on 'Live on MTV Unplugged' playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLNZ4pVtD8MsGe2dPc-tShVM3QFaR7gQFi
In order to see the subtitles, you need to click on the 'Subtitles/closed captions' on the lower right-hand side of the video. To change the language, click on 'Settings' just right of 'Subtitles/closed captions'.
published: 08 Nov 2020
Marty Robbins - Singing The Blues (Live)
Marty Robbins performed "Singing The Blues" live on Country Style USA in 1958.
published: 20 Oct 2014
Singing The Blues
Provided to YouTube by Legacy/Columbia
Singing The Blues · Marty Robbins
Marty Robbins - 16 Biggest Hits
℗ Originally Released 1956. All rights reserved by SONY BMG MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
Released on: 1998-07-14
Producer: Don Law
Executive Producer: Margie Hunt
Composer, Lyricist: Melvin Endsley
Unknown: Don Cobb
Unknown: Carlos Grier
Mastering Engineer: Denny Purcell
Auto-generated by YouTube.
published: 03 Aug 2015
Cliff Richard - Singing The Blues (Carmen Nebel Show, 31.10.2009)
Cliff & The Shadows performing „Singing The Blues" on the German TV show "Carmen Nebel Show" in October 2009.
Footage licensed from ZDF Studios. All rights reserved.
To stay up to date with all new releases on the channel subscribe here: https://bit.ly/3152uk6
Like Cliff on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sircliffrichard
#CliffRichard
Singing The Blues by the late Arizona songwriter Marty Robbins
Lyrics:
Well, I never felt more like singin' the blues
'Cause I never thought that I'd ever lose...
Singing The Blues by the late Arizona songwriter Marty Robbins
Lyrics:
Well, I never felt more like singin' the blues
'Cause I never thought that I'd ever lose
Your love dear, why'd you do me this way
Well, I never felt more like cryin' all night
'Cause everything's wrong, there ain't nothin' right
With-out you, you got me singin' the blues.
Now the moon and stars no longer shine
The dream is gone I thought was mine
There's nothin' left for me to do
But cry-why-why over you
Well, I never felt more like runnin' away
But how can I go when I couldn't stay
With-out you, you got me singin' the blues.
Well the moon and stars no longer shine
And the dream is gone that I thought was mine
There's nothin' left for me to do
But cry-why-why over you
Well, I never felt more like runnin' away
But how can I go when I couldn't stay
Without you, you got me singin' the blues.
Without you, you got me singin' the blues
--
(C) 1969 Harmony Records
#MartyRobbins
Singing The Blues by the late Arizona songwriter Marty Robbins
Lyrics:
Well, I never felt more like singin' the blues
'Cause I never thought that I'd ever lose
Your love dear, why'd you do me this way
Well, I never felt more like cryin' all night
'Cause everything's wrong, there ain't nothin' right
With-out you, you got me singin' the blues.
Now the moon and stars no longer shine
The dream is gone I thought was mine
There's nothin' left for me to do
But cry-why-why over you
Well, I never felt more like runnin' away
But how can I go when I couldn't stay
With-out you, you got me singin' the blues.
Well the moon and stars no longer shine
And the dream is gone that I thought was mine
There's nothin' left for me to do
But cry-why-why over you
Well, I never felt more like runnin' away
But how can I go when I couldn't stay
Without you, you got me singin' the blues.
Without you, you got me singin' the blues
--
(C) 1969 Harmony Records
#MartyRobbins
Writer: Melvin Endsley ●
Releasing date: October 1956 [Usa]; December 1956 [UK] ●
Format: 7" single ●
Label: Columbia (4-40769) [Usa]; Philips (JK 1001) [UK]...
Writer: Melvin Endsley ●
Releasing date: October 1956 [Usa]; December 1956 [UK] ●
Format: 7" single ●
Label: Columbia (4-40769) [Usa]; Philips (JK 1001) [UK] ●
B-side: "Crazy with love" ●
Chart positions: #1 Billboard [Usa]; #1 UK charts ●
Recording: with Ray Conniff & His Orchestra ●
Other versions: Black Oak Arkansas; Johnny Burnette; Eddie Condon; Gail Davies; Jason Eddy & the Centremen; Dave Edmunds; Bill Haley & The Comets; Burl Ives; Bert Jansch; Kentucky Headhunters; Jerry Lee Lewis; Dean Martin; The Mills Brothers; Daniel O'Donnell; Marie Osmond; Cliff Richard & The Shadows; Gene Summers; Vivian Vance & William Frawley ●
NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT INTENDED. Pictures and music belong to their respective owners. I don't own or claim to own it. Can and will remove on request.
Writer: Melvin Endsley ●
Releasing date: October 1956 [Usa]; December 1956 [UK] ●
Format: 7" single ●
Label: Columbia (4-40769) [Usa]; Philips (JK 1001) [UK] ●
B-side: "Crazy with love" ●
Chart positions: #1 Billboard [Usa]; #1 UK charts ●
Recording: with Ray Conniff & His Orchestra ●
Other versions: Black Oak Arkansas; Johnny Burnette; Eddie Condon; Gail Davies; Jason Eddy & the Centremen; Dave Edmunds; Bill Haley & The Comets; Burl Ives; Bert Jansch; Kentucky Headhunters; Jerry Lee Lewis; Dean Martin; The Mills Brothers; Daniel O'Donnell; Marie Osmond; Cliff Richard & The Shadows; Gene Summers; Vivian Vance & William Frawley ●
NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT INTENDED. Pictures and music belong to their respective owners. I don't own or claim to own it. Can and will remove on request.
Provided to YouTube by TuneCore
Singing the Blues · Positive Motion
Take You Higher
℗ 2011 Afakasi Unlimited c/o Robert Sterling Music Publishing
Released o...
Provided to YouTube by TuneCore
Singing the Blues · Positive Motion
Take You Higher
℗ 2011 Afakasi Unlimited c/o Robert Sterling Music Publishing
Released on: 2011-08-18
Auto-generated by YouTube.
Provided to YouTube by TuneCore
Singing the Blues · Positive Motion
Take You Higher
℗ 2011 Afakasi Unlimited c/o Robert Sterling Music Publishing
Released on: 2011-08-18
Auto-generated by YouTube.
From Paul's performance on MTV UNPLUGGED on 25 January 1991. The song can be found on his album UNPLUGGED: THE OFFICIAL BOOTLEG released in May 1991.
Link to ...
From Paul's performance on MTV UNPLUGGED on 25 January 1991. The song can be found on his album UNPLUGGED: THE OFFICIAL BOOTLEG released in May 1991.
Link to Paul's performance on 'Live on MTV Unplugged' playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLNZ4pVtD8MsGe2dPc-tShVM3QFaR7gQFi
In order to see the subtitles, you need to click on the 'Subtitles/closed captions' on the lower right-hand side of the video. To change the language, click on 'Settings' just right of 'Subtitles/closed captions'.
From Paul's performance on MTV UNPLUGGED on 25 January 1991. The song can be found on his album UNPLUGGED: THE OFFICIAL BOOTLEG released in May 1991.
Link to Paul's performance on 'Live on MTV Unplugged' playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLNZ4pVtD8MsGe2dPc-tShVM3QFaR7gQFi
In order to see the subtitles, you need to click on the 'Subtitles/closed captions' on the lower right-hand side of the video. To change the language, click on 'Settings' just right of 'Subtitles/closed captions'.
Provided to YouTube by Legacy/Columbia
Singing The Blues · Marty Robbins
Marty Robbins - 16 Biggest Hits
℗ Originally Released 1956. All rights reserved by S...
Provided to YouTube by Legacy/Columbia
Singing The Blues · Marty Robbins
Marty Robbins - 16 Biggest Hits
℗ Originally Released 1956. All rights reserved by SONY BMG MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
Released on: 1998-07-14
Producer: Don Law
Executive Producer: Margie Hunt
Composer, Lyricist: Melvin Endsley
Unknown: Don Cobb
Unknown: Carlos Grier
Mastering Engineer: Denny Purcell
Auto-generated by YouTube.
Provided to YouTube by Legacy/Columbia
Singing The Blues · Marty Robbins
Marty Robbins - 16 Biggest Hits
℗ Originally Released 1956. All rights reserved by SONY BMG MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
Released on: 1998-07-14
Producer: Don Law
Executive Producer: Margie Hunt
Composer, Lyricist: Melvin Endsley
Unknown: Don Cobb
Unknown: Carlos Grier
Mastering Engineer: Denny Purcell
Auto-generated by YouTube.
Cliff & The Shadows performing „Singing The Blues" on the German TV show "Carmen Nebel Show" in October 2009.
Footage licensed from ZDF Studios. All rights rese...
Cliff & The Shadows performing „Singing The Blues" on the German TV show "Carmen Nebel Show" in October 2009.
Footage licensed from ZDF Studios. All rights reserved.
To stay up to date with all new releases on the channel subscribe here: https://bit.ly/3152uk6
Like Cliff on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sircliffrichard
#CliffRichard
Cliff & The Shadows performing „Singing The Blues" on the German TV show "Carmen Nebel Show" in October 2009.
Footage licensed from ZDF Studios. All rights reserved.
To stay up to date with all new releases on the channel subscribe here: https://bit.ly/3152uk6
Like Cliff on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sircliffrichard
#CliffRichard
Singing The Blues by the late Arizona songwriter Marty Robbins
Lyrics:
Well, I never felt more like singin' the blues
'Cause I never thought that I'd ever lose
Your love dear, why'd you do me this way
Well, I never felt more like cryin' all night
'Cause everything's wrong, there ain't nothin' right
With-out you, you got me singin' the blues.
Now the moon and stars no longer shine
The dream is gone I thought was mine
There's nothin' left for me to do
But cry-why-why over you
Well, I never felt more like runnin' away
But how can I go when I couldn't stay
With-out you, you got me singin' the blues.
Well the moon and stars no longer shine
And the dream is gone that I thought was mine
There's nothin' left for me to do
But cry-why-why over you
Well, I never felt more like runnin' away
But how can I go when I couldn't stay
Without you, you got me singin' the blues.
Without you, you got me singin' the blues
--
(C) 1969 Harmony Records
#MartyRobbins
Writer: Melvin Endsley ●
Releasing date: October 1956 [Usa]; December 1956 [UK] ●
Format: 7" single ●
Label: Columbia (4-40769) [Usa]; Philips (JK 1001) [UK] ●
B-side: "Crazy with love" ●
Chart positions: #1 Billboard [Usa]; #1 UK charts ●
Recording: with Ray Conniff & His Orchestra ●
Other versions: Black Oak Arkansas; Johnny Burnette; Eddie Condon; Gail Davies; Jason Eddy & the Centremen; Dave Edmunds; Bill Haley & The Comets; Burl Ives; Bert Jansch; Kentucky Headhunters; Jerry Lee Lewis; Dean Martin; The Mills Brothers; Daniel O'Donnell; Marie Osmond; Cliff Richard & The Shadows; Gene Summers; Vivian Vance & William Frawley ●
NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT INTENDED. Pictures and music belong to their respective owners. I don't own or claim to own it. Can and will remove on request.
Provided to YouTube by TuneCore
Singing the Blues · Positive Motion
Take You Higher
℗ 2011 Afakasi Unlimited c/o Robert Sterling Music Publishing
Released on: 2011-08-18
Auto-generated by YouTube.
From Paul's performance on MTV UNPLUGGED on 25 January 1991. The song can be found on his album UNPLUGGED: THE OFFICIAL BOOTLEG released in May 1991.
Link to Paul's performance on 'Live on MTV Unplugged' playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLNZ4pVtD8MsGe2dPc-tShVM3QFaR7gQFi
In order to see the subtitles, you need to click on the 'Subtitles/closed captions' on the lower right-hand side of the video. To change the language, click on 'Settings' just right of 'Subtitles/closed captions'.
Provided to YouTube by Legacy/Columbia
Singing The Blues · Marty Robbins
Marty Robbins - 16 Biggest Hits
℗ Originally Released 1956. All rights reserved by SONY BMG MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
Released on: 1998-07-14
Producer: Don Law
Executive Producer: Margie Hunt
Composer, Lyricist: Melvin Endsley
Unknown: Don Cobb
Unknown: Carlos Grier
Mastering Engineer: Denny Purcell
Auto-generated by YouTube.
Cliff & The Shadows performing „Singing The Blues" on the German TV show "Carmen Nebel Show" in October 2009.
Footage licensed from ZDF Studios. All rights reserved.
To stay up to date with all new releases on the channel subscribe here: https://bit.ly/3152uk6
Like Cliff on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sircliffrichard
#CliffRichard
Jimmie Dale Gilmore (born May 6, 1945) is an American country singer, songwriter, actor, recording artist and producer, currently living in Austin, Texas.
Biography
Gilmore is a native of the Texas Panhandle, having been born in Amarillo, Texas, and raised in Lubbock, Texas. His earliest musical influence was Hank Williams and the honky tonk brand of country music that his father played. In the 1950s, he was exposed to the emerging rock and roll of other Texans such as Roy Orbison and Lubbock native Buddy Holly, as well as to Johnny Cash. He was profoundly influenced in the 1960s by The Beatles and Bob Dylan and the folk music and blues revival in that decade.
With Joe Ely and Butch Hancock, Gilmore founded The Flatlanders. The group has been performing on and off since 1972. The band's first recording project, from the early 1970s, was barely distributed. It has since been acknowledged, through Rounder's 1991 reissue (More a Legend Than a Band), as a milestone of progressive, alternative country. The three friends continued to reunite for occasional Flatlanders performances, and in May 2002 released a long-awaited follow-up album, Now Again, on New West Records.