David Ball
Vocalist and songwriter David Ball is a country artist whose music respects the traditions of classic honky tonk sounds while also leaving room for folk and blues accents. After earning a cult following with the acoustic country act Uncle Walt's Band, whose sound anticipated the Americana movement, Ball found fame with his 1994 album Thinkin' Problem and its title track, a superb exercise in neo-traditionalist country that often saw him compared to acts like George Strait and Randy Travis. In many respects, however, he had more in common with Dwight Yoakam in his mix of old-school sounds with a newfangled energy and sense of sonic adventure. While Thinkin' Problem was Ball's best and most popular album, after he left the major labels behind, he welcomed the freedom to embrace more traditional sounds on independent releases such as 2001's Amigo and 2004's Freewheeler.
David Ball was born in July 9, 1953 in Rock Hill, South Carolina, and grew up in Spartanburg, a town 60 miles to the west. His father was a Baptist minister and his mother played the piano. When he was little, Ball picked up a ukulele and learned to play, and he graduated to the guitar when he was 12. When Ball was in junior high, he began writing songs and played bass in the school band while playing country tunes with his friends, occasionally performing at school talent shows. Ball made friends with two other local music fans, Walter Hyatt and Champ Hood, and they started playing music together that was one-part traditional country, one-part bluegrass, and one-part Western swing. The trio called themselves Uncle Walt's Band (with Ball singing lead and playing upright bass), and after winning over audiences in South Carolina, they relocated to Nashville, hoping to break into the big time. Uncle Walt's Band never landed a breakout hit or a major-label deal, but their independently released albums were well-regarded and they found a loyal following in Austin, Texas, where their smart but unpretentious sound was a good fit for the city's well-established singer/songwriter community. The group made a home in Austin, but a wider audience eluded them, and they broke up in 1983.
By the late '80s, Ball had returned to Nashville and was making ends meet as a contract songwriter when he landed his first record deal as a solo artist with RCA. Between May 1988 and September 1989, they released three singles from Ball, "You Go, You're Gone," "Steppin' Out," and "Gift of Love" (curiously they all had the same B-side, "I Wish He Was Me [And She Was You]"), but sales were middling at best and an album Ball cut for the label went unreleased. He fared better when he signed with Warner Bros. several years later; his first single for Warner, 1994's "Thinkin' Problem," was a major hit that rose to number two on the Country Singles chart (it also crossed over to the pop chart, peaking at 40), while the album of the same name went platinum and spawned four other singles that entered the Country charts ("When the Thought of You Catched Up with Me" peaked at number seven and "Look What Followed Me Home" rose to number 11). The success of Thinkin' Problem prompted RCA to finally bring out Ball's unreleased 1989 album in 1994, simply titled David Ball (it also appeared as Steppin' Out).
Ball released two more albums for Warner Bros., 1996's Starlite Lounge and 1999's Play, before he moved to the independent Dualtone label in a bid for greater creative freedom. (During his Warner period, Ball was invited by Bob Dylan to contribute a performance of "Miss the Mississippi and You" for his 1997 multi-artist set The Songs of Jimmie Rodgers: A Tribute.) Ball's Dualtone debut, 2001's Amigo, included the song "Riding with Private Malone," which became one of the rare indie label country singles to become a major commercial success, peaking at number two on the country singles survey. The album also earned enthusiastic reviews from critics, as did 2004's Freewheeler, which appeared on Wildcatter Records. 2004 also saw the release of Beautiful Dreamer: The Songs of Stephen Foster, another multi-artist tribute album, with Ball singing "Old Folks at Home (Swanee River)." 2007's Heartaches by the Number (on Shanachie Records) included one original song, "Please Feed the Jukebox," along with covers of ten country classics. Ball had 11 fresh originals at hand for 2010's Sparkle City, which found him jumping labels again, this time to E1 Entertainment. A holiday album, The Greatest Christmas, arrived in September 2011 in time for yuletide festivities.
After a long recording layoff in which Ball devoted his time to touring, he issued the album Come See Me in September 2018. That same year, the celebrated reissue label Omnivore Recordings brought out a collection of material by Uncle Walt's Band, Anthology: Those Boys from Carolina, They Sure Enough Could Sing, while 2019 saw the same label release an expanded edition of UWB's 1974 debut (which was issued as Uncle Walt's Band and Blame It on the Bossa Nova). Omnivore next teamed up with Ball for an expanded reissue of Thinkin' Problem, which came out in 2020 and included his original songwriting demos for several of the tunes.
© Mark Deming /TiVo
Discographie
19 album(s) • Trié par Meilleures ventes
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Emanuel Moór: Music for Viola
Rosenstein String Quartet, Dirk Hegemann, David Ball, Anima Musicae Chamber Orchestra, Matyas Antal
Musique de chambre - Paru chez Toccata Classics le 1 juil. 2022
Disponible en24-Bit/96 kHz Stereo -
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Thinkin' Problem
Pop - Paru chez Rhino - Warner Records le 14 juin 1994
Disponible en16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo -
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Sparkle City
Country - Paru chez AGR Television Records le 23 avr. 2010
Disponible en16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo -
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Super Hits
Pop - Paru chez Warner Records - Nashville le 18 juil. 2000
Disponible en16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo -
Heartaches By The Number
Rock - Paru chez Shanachie le 20 juin 2005
Disponible en16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo -
Hazel Is Back!
Classique - Paru chez Gothic le 4 nov. 2022
Disponible en24-Bit/192 kHz Stereo -
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Thinkin' Problem Demos EP
Country - Paru chez Omnivore Recordings le 15 nov. 2019
Disponible en16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo -
Watching My Baby Not Coming Back
Country - Paru chez Warner Records le 18 nov. 2008
Disponible en16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo -
Hazel Is Back!
Classique - Paru chez Gothic le 4 nov. 2022
Disponible en24-Bit/192 kHz Stereo -
BE SAFE AND CONSIDERATE
Alternatif et Indé - Paru chez Vandelay Industries le 24 nov. 2023
Disponible en24-Bit/48 kHz Stereo -
Bartók, For Children, Volume I.
New Age - Paru chez Hunnia Records le 23 juil. 2024
Disponible en16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo -
Claude Debussy Préludes, L123 Book II.
New Age - Paru chez Hunnia Records le 30 juin 2023
Disponible en16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo