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The Very Special World Of Lee Hazlewoo...

13.8M streams

13,780,851

Cowboy In Sweden (Deluxe Edition)

9.6M streams

9,644,972

The LHI Years: Singles, Nudes & Backsi...

4.2M streams

4,228,986

Love and Other Crimes

3.9M streams

3,896,943

Requiem for an Almost Lady

2.5M streams

2,459,969

Trouble Is a Lonesome Town

1.4M streams

1,437,847

Cowboy in Sweden

1.3M streams

1,302,099

Friday's Child

939K streams

938,967

400 Miles from L.A. 1955-56

656.7K streams

656,730

Strung Out On Something New: The Repri...

650.8K streams

650,847

Biography

Country and pop iconoclast Lee Hazlewood was one of the music world's most unpredictable geniuses during a long, fruitful career. His early productions for Duane Eddy, especially 1958's echo-laden "Rebel Rouser," provided a template for rowdy instrumental rock; his recordings with Nancy Sinatra, like 1966's "These Boots Were Made for Walkin'," made her an icon; and the duets the pair made range from silly ("Jackson") to strikingly weird ("Some Velvet Morning"). Hazlewood's solo recordings could be straightforward and folky (1963's Trouble Is a Lonesome Town), opulent and orchestrated (1967's Lee Hazlewoodism: Its Cause and Cure), or brutally honest singer/songwriter fare (1971's Requiem for an Almost Lady); it was always eccentric and always delivered in a voice perfectly pitched for storytelling. In later years, when his music was rediscovered and reissued by a new generation of musicians who fell in love with his singular vision as a writer and producer, he was inspired to begin recording again. Before he passed in 2007, Hazlewood released a handful of suitably odd, perfectly Lee albums including the improbably titled Farmisht, Flatulence, Origami, ARF!!! and Me... and his final release, 2006's Cake or Death. Since then, multiple labels have reissued his work, most notably Light in the Attic, and have helped keep his contradictory legend alive. Hazlewood was born Barton Lee Hazlewood in 1929 in Mannford, Oklahoma. His father, an oil man, moved the family around continually during the 1930s and '40s while looking for work -- with stops in Arkansas, Kansas, and Louisiana -- before landing on the Gulf Coast in Port Neches, Texas. Hazlewood enrolled at Southern Methodist planning to study medicine but was conscripted soon after; he married his high school sweetheart, Naomi Shackleford, and spent several years overseas, spinning records in Japan for Armed Services Radio but also on active duty in Korea. Returning from the war, the Hazlewoods moved to California and then Coolidge, Arizona, where Lee used a short stint in broadcasting school to land a job with a local radio station. His playlists eventually gravitated toward rock & roll, and following a move to Phoenix several years later, he began producing tracks for his own label, Viv, in 1955. One year later, he wrote a song called "The Fool" and hired local country singer Sanford Clark to record it. Hazlewood's innovative recording techniques -- heavily echoed, in similar fashion to Sam Phillips' work at Sun -- turned the single into an unlikely Midwestern regional favorite and a national hit after it was reissued by Dot. It eventually peaked inside the Top Ten. Clark failed to repeat its success, however, and a Dot production deal for Hazlewood also fizzled, even after he moved back to California. He then hooked up with entrepreneur Lester Sill, who had previously been partners with Leiber & Stoller and was still managing the Coasters. Hazlewood cut some tracks back in Phoenix, including a few bizarre guitar-effects records by local sensation Duane Eddy. Eddy, an unlikely signee to Jamie Records (co-owned by Dick Clark), hit the big time with "Rebel Rouser" and went on to notch 15 singles in the Top 40. (Hazlewood's influence extended to an associate of Sill's named Phil Spector: Spector visited the studio in Phoenix to study Hazlewood's taping techniques, and his first productions appeared on the Trey label owned by Hazlewood and Sill.) With success came a series of complications, however, beginning with Eddy's decision to produce himself after an argument concerning royalties. Sill started focusing his patronage on Spector in the wake of his increasing production acumen during the early '60s. While the duo formed their own Philles label, Hazlewood was having little success with his productions, which included another brief stint with Eddy, longtime friend Al Casey (who had a moderate hit with "Surfin' Hootenanny"), and his own folk-pop group, the Shacklefords. In 1963, Hazlewood booked some time at Western Studios in Los Angeles to record tracks for his first solo LP, Trouble Is a Lonesome Town. A concept record centered on the eccentric residents of a small Western burg, it introduced Hazlewood's distinctive singing voice and songcraft. A keen observer of human behavior with a talent for storytelling, he dryly told despairing tales of hard-bitten small-town characters and prefaced each song with a few knowing words about its subject. It wasn't a formula for pop success, but Mercury A&R man Jack Tracy believed in the record and released it with little interference. After a year-long break from recording of any kind, he returned to the studio in 1965 when he was asked by Jimmy Bowen from Reprise to produce Dino, Desi & Billy -- a trio of Hollywood teens with royal blood (the first two were the sons of Dean Martin and Desi Arnaz, respectively). Hazlewood recorded a pair of Top 40 hits, "I'm a Fool" and "Our Time's Coming," and one of his compositions, "Houston," was recorded for a hit by Martin himself. Reprise showed their gratitude by allowing him to record his second LP, The N.S.V.I.P.'s ("The Not-So-Very-Important People"), in 1965. That same year, Hazlewood was duly apportioned the career of Nancy Sinatra, another blue-blooded child who had been at Reprise for four years without having a hit. By the end of 1965, she reached the pop charts with "So Long Babe." One year later, Sinatra became an international superstar thanks to the cultural milestone "These Boots Are Made for Walkin'." Hazlewood's other production chart-topper was "Somethin' Stupid," a duet between Nancy and father Frank that was nominated for a Record of the Year Grammy in 1967. After another record for Reprise (Friday's Child), his publisher got him a contract with MGM, and he released two LPs in two years: 1966's The Very Special World of Lee Hazlewood and 1967's Lee Hazlewood-ism: Its Cause and Cure. (A planned third record, 1968's Something Special, wasn't actually heard until decades later.) These albums were collections of desert-dry ballads boasting a healthy dose of Western fatalism and wanderlust, given impeccable productions that ranged from cowboy minimalism to overblown brassy pop. They were also a place to flesh out material he would later produce for Sinatra, like "Sand" and "Summer Wine." When the latter, a Nancy & Lee duet tacked onto the B-side of a 1966 Sinatra single, became a hit one year later, it sparked a full-fledged duet album. Nancy & Lee sold a million copies during 1968 and earned its place as one of the most influential records associated with either Sinatra or Hazlewood. "Some Velvet Morning," a haunting hymn to the twilight, became a much-covered classic thanks to airings by contemporaries (Vanilla Fudge, Gabor Szabo) and second- and third-generation inheritors (Lydia Lunch, Thin White Rope, Slowdive, Primal Scream). Also in 1968, Hazlewood the solo artist returned (briefly) to Reprise to issue Love and Other Crimes, another vaguely conceptual record that didn't garner chart success. Undaunted, he formed his own label, LHI (Lee Hazlewood Industries) with partner and fellow producer Suzy Jane Hokom. The label released a variety of acts, but its most famous signing was the International Submarine Band featuring Gram Parsons. His own LHI debut was 1969's The Cowboy & the Lady, recorded with another female foil, Ann-Margret. He followed it with the introspective, ballad-filled Forty later in the year. Increasingly, though, Hazlewood appeared restless in Southern California, recording a few sessions for country stars (including Eddy Arnold and Waylon Jennings) but gradually spending more time in Europe -- especially Sweden. In 1970, he recorded Cowboy in Sweden, the first of several collaborations with Swedish director Torbjörn Axelman. (Hazlewood even earned a Golden Rose at the Montreux Festival in 1973.) The same year, Requiem for an Almost Lady etched onto wax his breakup with Hokom, who had duetted on several of his MGM singles. More and more, his records weren't even being released in his home country, though he continued to do solid work -- he reunited with Sinatra to release a second volume of duets titled Nancy & Lee Again in 1972 and the following year's Poet, Fool or Bum was suitably odd and wonderful. After his recording career began drifting during the late '70s, Hazlewood retired briefly but resurfaced in 1995, touring America with Sinatra after her comeback album One More Time. He also contributed two vocal tracks to the Casey album Sidewinder, recorded in Phoenix and released in 1995 by the German label Bear Family. Around this time his work was being covered by musicians in the alternative scene ranging from Nick Cave to Tindersticks to Lambchop, and his albums were prized by collectors. In 1999, Smells Like Records (founded by Steve Shelley of Sonic Youth) began reissuing several of Hazlewood's classic LPs, and also released his first new album in 20 years, the typically iconoclastic Farmisht, Flatulence, Origami, ARF!!! and Me... He followed up with a record on the City Slang label in 2002 titled For Every Solution There's a Problem, then teamed again with Sinatra for 2004's Nancy & Lee 3. In 2005, Hazlewood was diagnosed with terminal renal cancer; nevertheless, he released a new record, Cake or Death, in late 2006. The end finally came on August 4, 2007. After his passing, there was a steady stream of archival releases as his legend grew. Rhino released Strung Out on Something New: The Reprise Recordings -- a collection of non-Nancy-oriented tracks cut for the label -- in 2008, but Light in the Attic wound up diving deep into the vaults, starting with 2012's The LHI Years: Singles, Nudes & Backsides (1968-71). The following year brought the lavish box set There's a Dream I've Been Saving: 1966-1971, a comprehensive anthology of his record label, LHI. In 2018, Light in the Attic released 400 Miles from L.A.: 1955-56, which chronicled his earliest songwriting demos. The same label also reissued his first two albums of duets with Nancy Sinatra, Nancy & Lee in 2022, Nancy & Lee Again in 2023. ~ John Bush & Tim Sendra, Rovi