C 718 1 front

$25.00

Daigle, Ted & His Westerners - Western Hits Remember Me?

Format: LP
Label: Countryville C-178
Year: 1969
Origin: Jacquet River, New Brunswick, 🇨🇦
Genre: country
Keyword: 
Value of Original Title: $25.00
Make Inquiry/purchase: email ryder@robertwilliston.com
Release Type: Albums
Websites:  No
Playlist: New Brunswick, Country & Western, 1960's

Tracks

Side 1

Track Name
Remember Me
I Was Number One
A Little Bitty Tear
I'll Try Again
The Chosen One
Ten Years

Side 2

Track Name
Homeless Hearts
Four Thousand Years Ago
Just a Girl I Used to Know
Not Enough to Go Around
Everybody's Somebody's Fool
Your Turn to Cry

Photos

C 718 label 2

Daigle, Ted & His Westerners - Western Hits Remember Me?

C 718 label 1

Daigle, Ted & His Westerners - Western Hits Remember Me?

C 718 2 back

Daigle, Ted & His Westerners - Western Hits Remember Me?

C 718 1 front

Western Hits Remember Me?

Videos

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Information/Write-up

A talented young Canadian, and a personable, easy-going, but very sincere young man is Ted Daigle. He possesses the happy faculty of selecting only the most pleasant and ear-pleasing tunes, whether they are to be played on one of his numerous radio shows or presented in one of his LPs. His taste in music is remarkable in that he is able to please whatever group he is playing to. Ted is equally at home with one of the latest "rock ’em—sock ’em" teen-type tunes or a jazz selection often referred to as "music for musicians." His first love, however, is a folk song—a song that has a story to tell.

Music has been this young Canadian’s life for some seven years, during which time he has been a highly successful broadcaster on three leading radio stations. He made his radio debut in his hometown of Bathurst, New Brunswick; from there, the entertainment trail took him to the Canadian Lakehead (where I first met him), and then on to greener pastures in the Nation’s Capital at CKOY. His on-air activities include the highest-rated show on the Ottawa station, where he programs folk, country, and western tunes, as well as a much-listened-to evening segment.

Whatever your mood at the moment, I recommend you lose no time in applying the needle to the wax contained herein—there’s bound to be one of Ted’s songs that will suit you to a "T".
-John Murphy, Program Director—CKOY

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