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In 1998 Reeves was inducted into the Texas Country Music Hall of Fame in Carthage, Texas, where the Jim Reeves Memorial is located. The inscription on the memorial reads, "If I, a lowly singer, dry one tear, or soothe one humble human heart in pain, then my homely verse to God is dear, and not one stanza has been sung in vain."
The Best of Jim Reeves Volume III "I Heard a Heart Break Last Night" b/w "Golden Memories and Silver Tears" (from The International Jim Reeves) 9 9 — — 1 — 38 — — The Best of Jim Reeves Vol. IV: 1968 "That's When I See the Blues (In Your Pretty Brown Eyes)" b/w "I've Lived a Lot In My Time" (from According to My Heart) 9 10 — — 5 ...
Jim Reeves Sings is the debut studio album by Jim Reeves, released in 1955 by Abbott Record Co.. It was the singer's only album released by the Abbott record label. [7]Back in the days, Reeves sang in a loud "hillbilly" style typical of country and western singers of the era. [8]
Twelve Songs of Christmas is an album by Jim Reeves released in the US in 1963. It was Reeves' first and only Christmas-themed release. The album was released by RCA Victor in stereo (LSP-2758) and mono (LPM-2758) respectively. The album was first released in South Africa as Merry Christmas from Jim Reeves as an eleven-track album. [2] "
The Jim Reeves Way is a studio album by Jim Reeves, [3] released posthumously in 1965 on RCA Victor. It was produced by Chet Atkins and Bob Ferguson . The album included 12 tracks, among which "Make the World Go Away" and "Maureen".
Remembering Patsy Cline & Jim Reeves is a tribute album released in 1982 remembering the music of country stars Patsy Cline and Jim Reeves who were both killed in plane crashes in the early 1960s. It was released by MCA Records. A similar album called Greatest Hits of Jim Reeves & Patsy Cline had been released the previous year by RCA Records.
According to My Heart is an album by Jim Reeves originally released in 1960 on RCA Camden. It was the first of two number-one albums in the UK for American singer Jim Reeves . It spent four weeks at the top of the chart in 1969, five years after Reeves had died. [ 1 ]
It was recorded in 1953 by Jim Reeves on Abbott 148. [1] The song was later included in the 1965 album Up Through the Years on RCA Victor . Reeves' version became his second No. 1 song on the Billboard magazine country chart in January 1954, and helped pave the way to his eventual superstardom.