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Ricky Nelson re-recorded "Garden Party" with the Jordanaires and studio musicians for his 1985 album All My Best. Country singer Johnny Lee recorded a cover version of the song in the late 1970s, entitled "Country Party", with slightly altered lyrics.
Nelson's band moved to Aspen and changed their name to "Canyon." Nelson and the new Stone Canyon Band began to tour for the Garden Party album. Nelson still played nightclubs and bars, but he soon advanced to higher-paying venues because of the success of Garden Party. In 1974, MCA was unsure as to what to do with the former teen idol.
Garden Party is the twenty-first studio album by Rick Nelson, this one a country rock album [1] recorded with the Stone Canyon Band in 1972. The title song tells the story of Nelson being booed at a concert at Madison Square Garden. The Album features self-panned songs like "Let It Bring You Along", "Nightime Lady", "So Long Mama".
Eric Hilliard Nelson (May 8, 1940 – December 31, 1985), known professionally as Ricky Nelson until his 21st birthday when he officially dropped the "y" and simply became Rick Nelson, was an American singer-songwriter.
The album was released on compact disc by Beat Goes On on March 13, 2002 as tracks 11 through 20 on a pairing of two albums on one CD with tracks 1 through 10 consisting of Nelson's 1972 album, Garden Party. [6] Bear Family included also the album in the 2010 The Last Time Around box set. [7]
"Travelin' Man" is an American popular song, best known as a 1961 hit single sung by Ricky Nelson. Singer-songwriter Jerry Fuller wrote it with Sam Cooke in mind, but Cooke's manager was unimpressed and did not keep the demo, which eventually wound up being passed along to Nelson.
In Concert at the Troubadour, 1969 is a live country rock album by Rick Nelson recorded in Los Angeles during four dates at The Troubadour in late 1969. The album featured the debut of the Stone Canyon Band, which included Randy Meisner, Tom Brumley, Allen Kemp, and Patrick Shanahan, and was Nelson's highest-charting release in three years.
Omitted is Ricky Nelson's own re-recording of Garden Party with the Jordanaires and studio musicians on his self-released 1985 album All My Best. The version is different enough (and in my opinion certainly good enough) to be included. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Jthaden (talk • contribs) 08:29, 19 December 2018 (UTC)