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FLOATER RISING- a collection of nine nearly lost Gary Floater songs - will be available in stores on Friday, April 1, a day known as El Dia del Tonto in many cultures.
The recovered classic songs on FLOATER RISING are remarkable as they show a songwriterman getting back up on that gift horse and riding, with no doubts or reasonable caution, even as the stink of desperation blows across the deserts of his mind.
FLOATER RISING CD RELEASE SHOWS ANNOUNCED!
(Gary will probly no-show but other musical guests will be there to take up the slack, as usual)
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Through the fires of failure a tougher metal is forged.
And those failure fires have made Gary Floater into an incredibly hard headed man.
When the slick record executive in the suit handed Gary a new recording contract, Floater signed it – against legal advice – without reading it. Buried in the document was the worst deal in country music history- 10 albums in exchange for a four dollar advance and a 0% royalty for the artist.
Gary stole his lawyer’s pen, looked hard at the recordman, and said, “You go on ahead of me Satan, I’m right behind you.”
Only three records were eventually released on that ill-fated contract with Hyena Family Records: Denim on Denim, Soul Patch, and You Had to Be There - Gary Floater Live. These albums hit markets in Sweden, Japan, and the state of Missouri in a famously uncoordinated release schedule.
The remaining Hyena Family recording projects were abandoned due to “quality control” concerns and "low sales," despite the fact that Gary had scratched out lyrics to hundreds of excellent songs, before an epic decade-long hangover prevented him from actually laying them down on tape.
When Gary’s artist friends came together in 2009 to make the tribute album, A Hero Never Learns, may of these unrecorded "lost songs" were not considered, as Gary’s distinctive spelling and chronic laryngitis prevented anyone from knowing the lyrics.
As Gary himself was not willing or able to break away from his home shopping network addiction to help solve any of the lyrical mysteries, the songs were nearly lost to history.
Only through the efforts of legendary producer Flip Dickerson did a set of the songs reemerge. Flip led a team of redneck first graders who were finally able to translate the crayon scribble from one of Gary's Big Chief tablets into lyric sheets.
The lyrics in this particular tablet were apparently intended for an album called The Devil’s Backpack that never saw the light of day.
The resulting collection - of nine nearly lost Gary Floater songs - is remarkable as it shows a songwriterman getting back up on that gift horse and riding, with no doubts or reasonable caution, even as the stink of desperation blew across the deserts of his mind.
Flip Dickerson called up Puffy Dan Walters, who then phoned B.W. Akins, who called up Marvin Hopkins, who then contacted Roy Huffmeister over Myspace for another session. Now a second Gary Floater tribute album is in the can.
Floater Rising - the number 2 tribute album - drops April 1, 2011
PREVIEW SONGS AND PRE-ORDER "FLOATER RISING" HERE
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There's a few old songs on this and some newer ones. They didn't sing em as good as I would have but they sure tried. I can't really undestand their vocals all the time and the drums are mixed to quite but its all right I guess. You get what you pay for.
Thanks anyway though.
I wish I wadent barred from re-recording them myself due to contractual obligations and laringitis. I wish the original master recordings I did for Columbus records back in the heyday of the 60s, 70s, and 80s wouldn't have gone out of print and burnt up in a mobile home park fire.
I know there's better songwriters out there than me but I just always wrote as real as I can.
Gary
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If you ask Gary Floater what keeps him going after surviving the inevitable ups and downs of four decades of the entertainment business and after influencing three generations of country artists with his honest and bleary-eyed songwriting, he'll tell you: it started out all for the money.
And just when he seemed to be in reach of the financial decadence he'd always dreamed about - at the age of 25 - his financial prospects deteriorated after a string of ill-advised televised comments and international marriages that kept Gary from returning to the country of his birth.
Maybe it was due to lingering embarrassment over his late night televised falling-out with Telly Savalas. Maybe the distance from the red dirt of his Missouri home snuffed Gary's creative spark. Whatever the reason, from 1983 to 1993, during ten years, Gary wrote only two songs, "Grandpa's Promise" and "A Whole Lot Further To Fall."
When he was penniless and stranded in the Netherlands, selling fruit to Dutch businessmen in the subway stations of Amsterdam, that's when the songwriting began again. And that's when it became all about the music.
If you told the scruffy haired young man who grew up near in Miami, Missouri that he would write hit songs one day that inspired hundreds to sing along, to tunes like "That's When the Eagle Screams" and "It's High Time This Old Cowboy Quit Getting So Goldanged High," he wouldn't have believed you.
But he did. He's been to hell and back.
For the money. For the music. And for you - the fans.
Ten years since his last major label release, a group of artists who have been moved by Gary's works have joined together in a big public thank you to a man who made country music and did it his way.
The Floater Way.
A Hero Never Learns: The Songs of Gary Floater
Coming soon on Columbus Records...
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