Don Williams Volume One | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Don Williams |
Cover: | donwilliamsvolumeone.jpg |
Released: | June 1973 |
Genre: | Country |
Label: | JMI Records |
Producer: | Allen Reynolds |
Next Title: | Don Williams Volume Two |
Next Year: | 1974 |
Don Williams Volume One[1] is the debut studio album by American country music singer Don Williams.[2] Released in 1973 on the JMI Records label, the album reached number five on the US Country Albums Chart. It was re-issued in 1974 on the ABC DOT label and subsequently in 1980 on the MCA label. "The Shelter of Your Eyes" and "Come Early Morning" were released as singles in 1973.[3]
From 1964 to 1971, Don Williams formed and played with the band the Pozo-Seco Singers.[4] In 1966, the band signed with Columbia Records, due to the strength of their first single, "Time".[5] Williams left the band in 1971, and moved to Nashville, where he met producer and writer Allen Reynolds, who introduced Williams to country singer and businessman Jack Clement, who had just founded JMI Records. Williams was soon signed to JMI records, and Reynolds would go on to produce and write on Williams' next two albums.[6]
Initially a songwriters demo was recorded to sell Williams' songs to other artists. However, when there wasn't a strong initial response, it was decided to record and release a full-length album.[7]
At the time the album was released, the Nashville sound featured more elaborate orchestral arrangements; however Don Williams Volume One caught on.[8]
In addition to producing the album, Reynolds contributed the song "I Recall a Gypsy Woman" written along with Bob McDill and Williams. While not initially released as a single in 1973, the song would be released as the B-side from the Don Williams Volume Two album single "Atta Way Go", and as a single in the UK in 1976, where it become a minor hit.
Bob McDill[9] had a hand in writing three of the album's songs, including the final song on the album, "Amanda", which was also included as the B-side on his No. 12 hit "Come Early Morning." Williams' version reached No. 33 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart.[10]
When Williams died in 2017, his version of "Amanda" was singled out in his Rolling Stone obituary:
“In giving voice to songs like ‘Good Ole Boys Like Me,’ ‘Lord, I Hope This Day Is Good’ and ‘Amanda,’ Don Williams offered calm, beauty, and a sense of wistful peace that is in short supply these days,” Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum CEO Kyle Young said in a statement Friday. “His music will forever be a balm in troublesome times. Everyone who makes country music with grace, intelligence, and ageless intent will do so while standing on the shoulders of this gentle giant.”[11]The masters for both "Come Early Morning" and "Amanda," along with Williams' other recordings for JMI Records, were sold to ABC-Dot Records in 1974.[12]
From the original vinyl:
From the album liner notes: