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"Distant Drums" is a song which provided US singer Jim Reeves with his only UK No. 1 hit – albeit posthumously – in the United Kingdom in 1966, some two years after his death in a plane crash on 31 July 1964. [1] The song remained in the UK Singles Chart for 25 weeks. The single also topped the US country chart for four weeks, becoming his ...
Jim Reeves: Producer(s) Ronnie Milsap, Tom Collins: ... "Am I Losing You" is a 1957 single written and first recorded by American country music artist Jim Reeves. [1]
The Country Side of Jim Reeves "Four Walls" b/w "I Know and You Know" (Non-album track) 1 2 12 The Best of Jim Reeves "Two Shadows on Your Window" / 9 12 — Up Through the Years "Young Hearts" 12 15 — 1958 "Anna Marie" b/w "Everywhere You Go" (from Jim Reeves) 3 7 93 Girls I Have Known "Overnight" / 10 26 — Distant Drums "I Love You More ...
On the 15th anniversary of Reeves death, Mary told a country music magazine interviewer, "Jim Reeves my husband is gone; Jim Reeves the artist lives on." [25] During 1966, Reeves' record "Distant Drums" hit number one on the UK Singles Chart and remained there for five weeks. The song stayed in the UK chart for 25 weeks, and took number one on ...
Yours Sincerely, Jim Reeves is a studio album by Jim Reeves, released posthumously in 1966 on RCA Victor. [2] It was produced by Chet Atkins and Bob Ferguson. [3]The recording on side one is from Reeves' radio interview that he gave while touring Europe in 1964.
Jim Reeves on Stage is a live album by Jim Reeves, released posthumously in 1968 on RCA Victor. [2] [3] ... "Am I Losing You" (Reeves) Dialogue "Bimbo" (Rod Morris)
40 Golden Greats is a greatest hits album by Jim Reeves. It was released in 1975 and reached number one on the UK Albums Chart , [ 1 ] where it was a posthumous number one . Surprisingly, it does not include " I Love You Because ".
Songs to Warm the Heart is an album recorded by Jim Reeves and released in 1959 on the RCA Victor label (catalog no. LSP-2001). The album was produced by Chet Atkins. The cover photograph was by Don Cravens, and the liner notes were written by Don Richardson. [1] [2] AllMusic gave the album three stars. [2]