Rex Allen Sings 16 Favorite Songs – Christopher Thelen

Rex Allen Sings 16 Favorite Songs
Buena Vista / Walt Disney Records, 1961
Reviewed by Christopher Thelen
Published on Jul 28, 1998

As much as I don’t listen to it a lot, I do like a lot of the
music of older generations – the music my parents grew up with, or
maybe even that my grandparents grew up with. The problem is that
today’s generation is so wrapped up with the present-day fads that
they often don’t take the time to check out some of the music that
helped make today’s possible.

An example is Rex Allen. Another of the singing cowboys, you
probably haven’t heard of him. (Even my father, who I consider to
be knowledgable about all things Baby Boomer, said he didn’t know
who Allen was.) While he might have been eclipsed by others like
Roy Rogers, Allen had a powerful voice that went from baritone to
bass just as smooth as the whiskey the bad guys were drinking.

As part of their “Archive Collection”, Walt Disney Records
recently released
Rex Allen Sings 16 Favorite Songs, a 1965 album making its
debut on CD. (This disc can only be ordered from Walt Disney; check
out their Web site for more information.) Not so much country as
often as it was popular music, it still is a disc that provides a
looking glass into the past and provides for an enjoyable 40
minutes.

If you pick this up expecting country music in the style of Hank
Williams, you might be disappointed. The music contained in these
16 songs has many tinges of older, pre-rock popular music, but
there is a distinct Western flavor to the music on this disc. Songs
like “The Little Old Church In The Valley,” “The Streets Of Laredo”
and “The Lilies Grow High” echo a feel of a Western one might have
seen in the movie houses back in the ’40s and ’50s. (One thing that
struck me was the darker side of some of the songs, especially
those dealing with death – something I wouldn’t have expected on a
Disney album.)

But there are odes to the present on this disc as well (at
least, the present being 1965), with songs like “Lazy River” and “I
Can’t Stop Loving You” making a strong presence on the listener. No
matter what he performs, Allen seems to do it with style and grace
– and he keeps even the modern Spice Girls-oriented audience
interested.

Sure, some of the tracks might seem to stretch to the point of
never ending (never mind the fact there isn’t a song on this disc
longer than three-and-a-half minutes), and there are occasional
throwbacks to corniness (“Who Shot The Hole In My Sombrero?”), but
these moments of weakness aren’t often, providing for an overall
strong release.

Allen might not be the best-known singing cowboy, but as
Rex Allen Sings 16 Favorite Songs proves, he should have
been. This is easily the most entertaining volume of Disney’s
“Archive Collection,” and is one worth the trouble of searching out
online.

Rating: B+

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