Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} Falling in Love...Again by Barbara Weller I found love at 88: three true romances. Barbara Cooper, 92, and Ron Brind, 88. The first time Ron kissed Barbara, she wasn’t overly impressed. She was in her late 80s, he was four years younger, and a long-standing friendship was developing into something more. But that first kiss wasn’t, well, quite what Barbara had been expecting. “I didn’t think too much of it,” she tells me with an impish smile. Ron, sitting beside her, bursts into laughter. “Now she tells me!” The next kiss, however, proved decisive. “We kissed again in the car, in the middle of Richmond. I was trying to get out, and he goes…” Barbara mimics Ron leaning in to her, creasing her lips into a gumless pucker. “It was so funny, that kiss! We laughed like drains. That was when I knew I was falling for him – soon after that silly kiss.” That was about four years ago; Barbara, now 92, and Ron, 88, have been a couple since. I meet them for tea at the Musical Museum in Brentford, west London: this quirky collection of Wurlitzers, music boxes and spooky, self-playing pianos is the backdrop to their favourite monthly tea dance. I’m talking to Barbara and Ron – and other couples who got together in their 70s, 80s or even 90s – about what it’s like to fall in love in later life. How do our attitudes to romantic relationships change over time? How does a first date at 80 compare with a date at 18? Does a lifetime’s experience mean late-blooming love is more tender, more considerate, than the intoxication and pyrotechnics of youth? Romance certainly still seems crucial to Barbara and Ron, who go dancing together regularly and have performed in public several times. “We both like the slow foxtrot,” Ron says. “The music is so romantic, especially some of the Sinatra songs. All you youngsters are missing out. There’s no bodily contact in ballroom dancing. You get to know each other, but in a nice way.” It was dancing that originally brought them together; dancing and badminton. Barbara and her husband Peter had been living in Bahrain since the 1950s; he worked for an oil company and Barbara was a secretary at an aluminium factory. In 1977, several years after Peter’s death, Barbara returned alone to England and set up home in Kew. Looking to make friends, she joined a group that met regularly to go dancing and play badminton. It was there that she met Ron and his wife, Ellen. Ellen and Barbara quickly grew close. “We used to go out together,” Barbara recalls. “Have lunch somewhere nice.” Ron and Ellen were living in Ham, where he worked as a salesman for a commercial stationery company. He became friendly with Barbara, too, but a friendship was all it remained until after Ellen’s death in 2009. “Ellen and I had been married for nearly 50 years,” Ron says. “Eventually, she succumbed to dementia. I cared for her for years. When she died, I had to either shrivel up and go to sleep, or start a new life for myself.” Ron chose the latter. He joined an aerobics class – he still goes once a week, the only man in a class of 30 women. “They give me plenty of scope for chats,” he says, while Barbara chuckles. And he renewed his friendship with Barbara. By then, she had been a widow for more than 30 years; she’d had a number of “acquaintances”, but no serious relationships. “There were a couple of gentlemen who could dance well, but I wouldn’t have gone further with any of them. One of them grumbled so much. He said, ‘You wouldn’t even kiss me in a lift!’ And I said, ‘I’m not kissing you at all.’” But despite having been alone for so long, she wasn’t surprised that her friendship with Ron was easing into something deeper. “It seemed,” she says, “the natural thing to do.” Ron agrees: “Having known each other for such a long time, trusted one another and believed one another…” Barbara interjects: “It felt comfortable. But we hadn’t fallen in love then, had we?” “Not really, no,” Ron says. “It was more company, really.” His voice drops to a whisper. “It’s terrible, loneliness.” “Now,” Barbara says, “it’s the real thing.” There is, they emphasise, a natural difference between this relationship and the long marriages that defined their early lives. They live separately (each prizes their independence too highly), but talk at least once a day on the phone and rarely spend a weekend apart. Ron does most of the cooking, looks after Barbara’s garden and is helping her put a lifetime’s paperwork in order. “We’re very close up here,” Ron says, tapping the side of his head. “I’ve got keys to her house. We respect one another; there’s no shutting doors.” Their understanding of love, and what it takes to maintain a successful relationship, has changed over the years: they are now more willing to compromise, and are more forgiving of each other’s foibles. “You learn how important it is,” Barbara explains, “just to be considerate of each other. To do nice things for each other. Ron’s particularly good at that. I can’t add up all the romantic things he’s done. He’s always there to help me on with my coat, open the door. He’s a real gentleman, and I love him for it.” The best thing about finding love so late in life, Ron says, is the fact that he’s no longer lonely. “And even though we’re both older, there is another side…” He trails off, looking bashful. “It’s nice to have someone against your back on a cold night.” “Even on a warm night!” Barbara says, and they both dissolve once more into fits of laughter. Do they ever, I wonder, wish their lives had brought them together sooner? “Sometimes,” Barbara admits. “Sometimes, yes,” Ron adds. “But then, quickly, we realise that we’ve had a long span.” “And we’re just very lucky,” Barbara says, “to be together now.” Maureen Hearfield, 81, and Ray Badby, 94. ‘When my wife died, I was lost. I flew around the world for a year. Maureen straightened me up.’ Photograph: Gary Calton for the Guardian. One day four years ago, Maureen Hearfield was flicking through a magazine when she came across an advert for an introductions agency called Single Friends. It was promising to put older single women in touch with older single men. Maureen, then in her late 70s, and a widow, was intrigued. She phoned the agency, and received a list of men and their phone numbers in the post. The first number she called belonged to a 90- year-old man named Ray Badby. “I told him, ‘I just want a pen-friend,’” Maureen says. “But Ray said, ‘I can’t write very well any more, because of my hands. Could I come and see you?’ So I said, ‘OK, fine.’ He came on a Sunday afternoon. He brought me a packet of biscuits he’d won off the dominoes – he loves playing dominoes – and we watched Songs Of Praise together, and he stopped nearly all day.” Maureen was living in sheltered housing in Hull, where she was born and where she had lived with her late husband, Pete – a joiner, whom she’d met on a bus aged 17 – and their five children. Ray lived almost 100 miles away in a residential home in the North Yorkshire town of Northallerton. It was a long drive to Hull, but he made the journey there and back that Sunday, and on the Thursday he phoned to say he’d like to see Maureen again. “I rang to see whether she’d had any response from the other men on her list,” Ray says with a broad smile. Maureen hadn’t, so Ray, relieved, arranged to visit her again a few days later. “You couldn’t get here quickly enough, could you?” Maureen says, matching his smile with her own. Soon, the couple were spending more than half the week together: Ray would set out from Northallerton after lunch on a Wednesday and stay until Sunday in the guest room at Maureen’s sheltered housing complex; and he would never fail to phone Maureen on the days they were apart. And then, after a year or so, Ray phoned to say that the room next to his had fallen vacant: would Maureen like to move in? She would: Maureen packed up her life in Hull, and her son drove her to the Northallerton home where she and Ray now live in adjacent rooms. We meet for lunch nearby, at the Golden Lion hotel, where Ray – who was born not far from Northallerton, and moved here to work in the butcher’s shop, where he met his first wife, Lily – was thrown a welcome-home party in 1947, on his return from army service in India and Cyprus. Ray and Maureen are well known to the hotel staff, though they haven’t been on a date here: they’ve both had periods of ill health, and walk with walkers, so they prefer to spend their time at home. Each is quietly respectful of the other’s routine. “We have breakfast together,” Maureen says, “and then, during the day, we go into our own rooms and watch TV or read, and have a nap, and then we spend the evening together. It’s just like any relationship, really – when you’re married, you usually go off and do different things all day and come together again in the evening.” The companionship – and love – Maureen and Ray have found could not, it seems, have come as more of a surprise to both of them. Ray’s wife, Lily, died in 1980; he’d been devoted to her and never thought he’d meet anyone again. “After she died, I was absolutely lost,” he says. “I got on a plane to Hollywood. I did all of the US west coast, and then I went to Sydney, Hawaii, Fiji. I must have been abroad for a year. I just went round seeing things. I didn’t know what else to do.” Maureen had never expected to fall in love again, either. “Pete was my one,” she says. “But the years go by, and you’re getting older, and I started to think about having a pen-friend, that it would be nice to have letters to look forward to. To tell you the truth, I was quite happy. And then Ray came down that first time, and after he’d gone, there was this silence, and I suddenly realised I had been lonely.” Marriage is not on the agenda for Maureen and Ray: they are both content just to be living together, a fact that amuses her. “I wouldn’t have dreamed, when I was young, of [just] living with somebody,” she says. “It’s funny how things change as you get older. I don’t want to get married again. But there’s love there, isn’t there, Ray?” Ray nods. “There’s nobody else. Nobody could take her place.” Love, Maureen says, feels the same at any age: the emotion doesn’t change. I ask Ray what he likes most about Maureen and he replies, “She’s attractive to me. It’s not about glamour – she’s a lovely person. She straightened me up. She looks after me.” And there is, Maureen says, still plenty of room for romance. “I like it when Ray’s sat next to me and he holds my hand. There’s more in that than a kiss or anything.” What would they say to someone else in later life who is lonely and fears they might never meet anyone again? Maureen thinks for a moment. “I’d say that there’s always somebody for someone.” Doug Begbie, 90, and June Gotts, 84. ‘The first time, he brought me a box of Black Magic. Then onions in a plastic bag. I laughed so much’: Doug and June in Pakefield Church, Lowestoft, where they were married in 2006. Photograph: Si Barber for the Guardian. Doug can remember the exact moment he realised he was in love with June. He’d helped her on to a train at Halesworth station, said goodbye, and was watching the train pull away. “I was waving to her,” he tells me, tears springing to his eyes, “and I thought, ‘I’ve fallen in love with that woman.’ I went home and thought, ‘How can a man of 80 fall in love?’” But, 80 or not, he had; and so, it gradually became clear, had June with him. Theirs wasn’t a new friendship: they’d met about 50 years earlier, when Doug and his second wife, Janet, were working at a Dr Barnardo’s children’s home in Suffolk. On Sundays, they would take the children to the same church in Lowestoft that June and her husband Peter, a railwayman, attended. The two couples became friendly, but the friendship faltered over the years, especially with Doug and Janet spending periods living abroad. Eventually, they returned to Suffolk, where they lived until Janet died 13 years ago. It was only when June was invited to Doug’s 80th birthday party that their friendship was rekindled. June very nearly didn’t go: Peter had died suddenly three years before, from a heart attack, and “I hadn’t been out anywhere in those three years,” she explains. “But Paul, Doug’s son, telephoned to invite me, and he said, ‘Well, if you can come up on the train, there’ll be someone to meet you.’ So I said I would go.” At the party, Doug and June sat next to each other and remembered just how much they liked each other’s company. Not long afterwards, Doug phoned to say he was coming to Lowestoft: might he drop in and see her? Yes, she said. “He came on his bike,” she recalls. “He had a big yellow coat, a great bushy beard, and a box of Black Magic. The next time he came, he brought me onions in a plastic bag, because I’d said I liked them. I laughed so much. The time after, he brought me apples.” As Doug recalls, “I just kept thinking, ‘Faint heart never won fair lady.’” After a while, he plucked up the courage to write June a letter, asking her to marry him, but only to say yes if she was absolutely sure. She was: their wedding took place nine years ago, on a sunny day in May 2006, at Pakefield church in Lowestoft, just down the road from June’s bungalow, where they now live. The vicar admitted that he’d never married an octogenarian before, and suggested they take some time to learn their vows. “I printed out sheets [with the vows on] and stuck them up all over the house,” Doug says. “Those sheets were everywhere!” June laughs. “Even in the loo.” On the day, however, it was June who fluffed her lines: “She said, ‘I, Douglas…’,” Doug recalls with a grin. “Somebody came up to us afterwards,” June says, “and said, ‘That’s one of the best weddings I’ve been to in years.’” A late marriage is not without its challenges. A few months before the wedding, Doug became seriously ill – the first wedding date they’d selected had to be postponed – and he has since been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. June is his main carer, but she now finds walking difficult. “It’s a lot of work, looking after Doug,” she admits. “He has so many pads and pipes, it’s like being with a Scotsman. My brother did worry, at first, that it might be too much for me, but the fact is, we love each other.” Romance, she says, remains important at any age. “I get bunches of flowers now and again,” she says, “or Doug goes to the shop and comes back with a couple of cream buns. We like to go to the charity shops together, looking for books.” There are, naturally, subjects on which they disagree, but those disagreements no longer seem to matter in the way they do with younger couples. “We have different views on things,” Doug says. “I don’t believe in monarchy, June does. I don’t believe in an organised church, and I think June does more than I do.” Neither of them wishes they’d had the opportunity to marry sooner: each respects the fact that they spent the larger part of their lives with other partners, with whom they had their children. A framed photograph of June’s first husband sits on the living room mantelpiece. They are simply happy, they say, to have found each other now. I ask Doug what he loves most about June and he says, “She’s always laughing, always talking. She’s a good cook. And if June isn’t here,” he adds, “I feel lonely.” Fallis, Barbara (1924–1980) American ballet dancer. Born 1924 in Denver, Colorado; died 1980 in New York, NY; m. Richard Thomas (dancer and teacher). Trained at Vic-Wells Ballet in London, performed with that company thereafter (1938–40); joined Ballet Theater in New York City where she danced for 8 years in such productions as Frederick Ashton's Les Patineurs , Antony Tudor's Shadow of the Wind and David Lichine's Helen of Troy; created feature role for Balanchine's Waltz Academy (1944); danced a season with Ballet Alicia Alonso where she performed in repertory of 19th-century works; with New York City Ballet, was featured in Balanchine's Valse Fantasie (1953) and Pas de Dix (1955), among others; taught with husband Richard Thomas at New York School of Ballet until her death. Cite this article Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography. MLA Chicago APA. "Fallis, Barbara (1924–1980) ." Dictionary of Women Worldwide: 25,000 Women Through the Ages . . Encyclopedia.com. 17 Apr. 2021 < https://www.encyclopedia.com > . "Fallis, Barbara (1924–1980) ." Dictionary of Women Worldwide: 25,000 Women Through the Ages . . Retrieved April 17, 2021 from Encyclopedia.com: https://www.encyclopedia.com/women/dictionaries-thesauruses-pictures-and-press-releases/fallis-barbara-1924-1980. Citation styles. Encyclopedia.com gives you the ability to cite reference entries and articles according to common styles from the Modern Language Association (MLA), The Chicago Manual of Style, and the American Psychological Association (APA). Within the “Cite this article” tool, pick a style to see how all available information looks when formatted according to that style. Then, copy and paste the text into your bibliography or works cited list.

Falling in Love Again ★½ In Love 1980 (PG) Romantic comedy about middle-aged dreamer Gould and realistic wife York. They travel from Los Angeles to their hometown of New York for his high school reunion, where Gould is suddenly attacked by nostalgia vibes for his youth, seen in countless flashbacks, and prominently featuring Pfeiffer, notable in her film debut. Like watching a home movie about people you don't care about. 103m/C VHS, DVD . Elliott Gould, Susannah York, Michelle Pfeiffer; D: Steven Paul; W: Ted Allan; C: Michael Mileham; M: Michel Legrand. Cite this article Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography. MLA Chicago APA. "Falling in Love Again ." VideoHound's Golden Movie Retriever . . Encyclopedia.com. (April 18, 2021). https://www.encyclopedia.com/arts/culture-magazines/falling-love-again. "Falling in Love Again ." VideoHound's Golden Movie Retriever . . Retrieved April 18, 2021 from Encyclopedia.com: https://www.encyclopedia.com/arts/culture-magazines/falling-love-again. Citation styles. Encyclopedia.com gives you the ability to cite reference entries and articles according to common styles from the Modern Language Association (MLA), The Chicago Manual of Style, and the American Psychological Association (APA). Within the “Cite this article” tool, pick a style to see how all available information looks when formatted according to that style. Then, copy and paste the text into your bibliography or works cited list. Falling in Love Again. Your browser doesn't support HTML5 audio. Here is a link to download the audio instead. : Volume Number. : Volume Number. Falling in Love Again. Spend $49 on print products and get FREE shipping at HC.com. Mass Market Paperback. Hell hath no fury like a bride scorned! Highborn country heiress Mallory Edwards was dutifully fulfilling family obligations when she exchanged marriage vows with a dashing gentleman she barely knew. But the charming beast abandoned her on their wedding night. Years later—facing prison because of her husband's debts—she has finally found the blackguard, John Barron, again. And she's not leaving until the faithless rogue grants her a divorce! John is enchanted by this delightful hellion who causes a scene at his London soirée. Could this be the forgotten rural miss whom his father once forced him to wed? Now that Mallory's reentered his life, John desperately wants her to stay—and not merely to help him snare the criminal who is ruining them both. But winning her hardened heart will take more than sweet words and sensuous kisses—he will have to become the caring, thoughtful husband who is truly worthy of her passion and her love. Falling in Love...Again by Barbara Weller. Dot Discography, Part 6 ABC-Dot LPs By David Edwards and Mike Callahan Last update: May 7, 2003. The first label on the ABC-Dot record series is blue nearest the center hole changing to yellow near the outside of the label, with black printing. "abc Dot" is above the center line, with "abc" in a black circle. Promotional copies were white with black print. Somewhere between DOSD-2050 and DOSD-2060, the logo was changed to "" instead of just "Dot." The rest of the label design remained the same. We would appreciate any additions or corrections to this discography. Just send them to us via e-mail. Both Sides Now Publications is an information web page. We are not a catalog, nor can we provide the records listed below. We have no association with Dot Records, which is currently owned by Universal Music Group. Should you want to contact Universal, or should you be interested in acquiring listed in this discography (which are all out of print), we suggest you see our Frequently Asked Questions page and follow the instructions found there. This story and discography are copyright 1999, 2003 by Mike Callahan. DOT ALBUM DISCOGRAPHY, PART 6. Number - Title - Artist [Release Date] (Chart) Contents. DOSD-2001 - Roy Clark/The Entertainer - Roy Clark [1974] (4-74, #186; 3-74, #4 C&W) Honeymoon Feelin'/She Makes The Living Worthwhile/I Really Don't Want To Know/Duelin' Banjos/Sunday Sunrise/The Most Beautiful Girl/Let Me Be There/Drink To Me Only With Thine Eyes/Love's All Around You/Chomp'n'/It's All Over (All Over Again) DOSD-2002 - Miss - Donna Fargo [1974] (11-74, #4 C&W) You Can't Be A Beacon (If Your Light Don't Shine)/U.S. of A./If You're Somewhere Listening/Words/Go Straight To Her/It Do Feel Good/Honeychild/Only The Strong/A Woman's Prayer/Send Me Home/. DOSD-2003 - Movin' On - Hank Thompson [1974] DOSD-2004 - Don Williams, Volume III - Don Williams [1974] (11-74, #3 C&W) I Wouldn't Want To Live If You Didn't Love Me/Fly Away/Ghost Story/Goodbye Isn't Really Good At All/Such A Lovely Lady/The Ties That Bind/When Will I Ever Learn/Why Lord Goodbye/I've Turned You To Stone/Lovin' Understandin' Man. DOSD-2005 - Family and Friends - Roy Clark & Family [1974] (11-74, #27 C&W) DOSD-2006 - Take Me Home to Somewhere - Joe Stampley [1974] (11-74, #16 C&W) DOSD-2007 - Diana Trask's Greatest Hits - Diana Trask [1974] (11-74, #32 C&W) DOSD-2008 - That's the Way Love Should Be - Brian Collins [1974] DOSD-2010 - Classic Clark - Roy Clark [1974] (11-74, #13 C&W) The Great Divide (S)/Hello Love (S)/Take Good Care Of Her (S)/Room Full Of Roses (S)/A Brand New Day (S)/It's Impossible (S)//Dear God (S)/The Chain (S)/You're Gonna Love Yourself (In The Morning) (S)/Papa Was A Good Man (S)/Until It's Time For You To Go (S) DOSD-2011 - Expressions - Ray Griff [1974] (1-75, #47 C&W) DOSD-2012 - A Girl Named Sue - Sue Richards [1974] (11-74, #44 C&W) DOSD-2013 - Countryfied - Ray Pillow [1974] (3-75, #46 C&W) DOSD-2014 - Don Williams, Volume I - Don Williams [1974] Reissue of JMI 4004. Come Early Morning/Too Late To Turn Back Now/Endless Sleep/The Shelter Of Your Eyes/I Recall A Gypsy Woman//No Use Running/How Much Time Does It Take/My Woman's Love/Don't You Believe/Amanda. DOSD-2015 - A Pair of Fives (Banjos, That Is) - Roy Clark and Buck Trent [1974] (3-75, #9 C&W) Shuckin' The Corn/Foggy Mountain Breakdown/Farewell Blues/Dear Old Dixie/Under The Double Eagle//Banjoy/Randy Lynn Rag/A Pair Of Fives/Nightcap/Duelin' Banjos. DOSD-2016 - I'm a Believer - Tommy Overstreet [1974] (2-75, #38 C&W) DOSD-2017 - Chris Gantry - Chris Gantry [1974] DOSD-2018 - Don Williams, Volume II - Don Williams [1974] Reissue of JMI 4006. DOSD-2019 - Connie Van Dyke Sings for You - Connie Van Dyke [1975] DOSD-2020 - Before the Next Teardrop Falls - Freddy Fender [1975] (4-75, #20; #1 C&W) Roses Are Red/I'm Not A Fool Anymore/Please Don't Tell Me How The Story Ends/You Can't Get There From Here/I Love My Rancho Grande/Wasted Days And Wasted Nights/I Almost Called Your Name/Before The Next Teardrop Falls/Wild Side Of Life/After The Fire Is Gone/Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye. DOSD-2021 - You're My Best Friend - Don Williams [1975] (5-75, #5 C&W) You're My Best Friend/Help Yourselves To Each Other/I Don't Wanna Let Go/Sweet Fever/Someone Like You//(Turn Out The Light And) Love Me Tonight/Where Are You/Tempted/You're The Only One/Reason To Be. DOSD-2022 - My Way - Shoji Tabuchi [1975] Japanese country artist. DOSD-2023 - Joe Stampley's Greatest Hits, Volume 1 - Joe Stampley [1975] (6-75, #28 C&W) DOSD-2024 - I'm in the Mood - Diana Trask [1975] DOSD-2025 - Narvel Felts - Narvel Felts [1975] (6-75, #4 C&W) Reconsider Me/ Blue Darlin'/Slip Away/Let My Fingers Do The Walking/I Remember You/I May Never Get To Heaven/Funny How Time Slips Away/Honey Love/Gone/No One Knows/Guess Who. DOSD-2026 - Freddy Weller - Freddy Weller [1975] (8-75, #34 C&W) DOSD-2027 - Greatest Hits, Volume 1 - Tommy Overstreet [1975] (8-75, #18 C&W) DOSD-2029 - Whatever I Say Means I Love You - Donna Fargo [1975] (9-75, #28 C&W) DOSD-2030 - Roy Clark's Greatest Hits, Volume 1 - Roy Clark [1975] (9-75, #15 C&W) DOSD-2031 - This Is Eddie Raven - Eddie Raven [1975] DOSD-2032 - Hank Thompson Sings Nat King Cole - Hank Thompson [1975] DOSD-2033 - Narvel the Marvel - Narvel Felts [1976] (2-76, #10 C&W) Somebody Hold Me (Until She Passes By)/Lonely Teardrops/Baby Warm/Blue Darlin'/I'm Afraid To Be Alone/The End/Don't Worry/A Band Of Gold (And Someone New That's Messin' Up My Mind)/Blue Suede Shoes/I Just Had You On My Mind/Away. DOSD-2035 - Greatest Hits - Don Williams [1975] (10-75, #5 C&W) Amanda/Come Early Morning/The Shelter Of Your Eyes/Atta Way To Go/She's In Love With A Rodeo Man/Down The Road I Go//I Wouldn't Want To Live If You Didn't Love Me/We Should Be Together/The Ties That Bind/Ghost Story/Don't You Believe/I Recall A Gypsy Woman. DOSD-2036 - Greatest Hits, Volume 1 - Narvel Felts [1975] (10-75, #20 C&W) DOSD-2037 - Say I Do - Ray Price [1975] (12-75, #29 C&W) DOSD-2038 - The Tommy Overstreet Show Live from the Silver Slipper - Tommy Overstreet [1975] (12-75, #36 C&W) DOSD-2040 - Easy as Pie - Billy "Crash" Craddock [1976] (2-76, #8 C&W) Easy As Pie/She's About A Mover/Think I'll Go Somewhere (And Cry Myself To Sleep)/You Can't Cry It Away/Another Woman/I Need Somebody To Love Me/Walk Softly/Has A Cat Got A Tail/The First Time/You Rubbed It In All Wrong/There Won't Be Another Now. DOSD-2041 - Heart to Heart - Roy Clark [1975] (11-75, #31 C&W) DOSD-2042 - Afternoon Delight - Johnny Carver [1976] (9-76, #28 C&W) DOSD-2044 - Are You Ready For Freddy - Freddy Fender [1975] (10-75, #41; #1 C&W) Secret Love/Love Cajun Style/Take Your Time/I Can't Put My Arms Around A Memory/Cielito Lindo Is My Lady/Begging To You/What'd I Say/How Much Is That Doggie In The Window/Teardrops In My Heart/(You Came In) The Winter Of My Life/I'm Not Through Loving You Yet/Goodbye Clothes. DOSD-2045 - This Is Barbara Mandrell - Barbara Mandrell [1976] (6-76, #26 C&W) DOSD-2046 - Jeris Ross - Jeris Ross [1976] DOSD-2048 - My First Album - Randy Corner [1976] DOSD-2049 - Harmony - Don Williams [1976] (5-76, #1 C&W) Till The Rivers All Run Dry/You Keep Coming 'Round/Don't You Think It's Time/I Don't Want The Money/Where The Arkansas River Leaves Oklahoma//Say It Again/Maybe I Just Don't Know/Magic Carpet/Time/Ramblin'/She Never Knew Me. DOSD-2050 - Rock 'N' Country - Freddy Fender [1976] (2-76, #59) Vaya Con Dios (S)/You'll Lose A Good Thing (S)/I Need You So (S)/Mathilda (S)/My Happiness (S)/Just Out Of Reach (S)//The Rains Came (S)/Take Her A Message I'm Lonely (S)/Since I Met You Baby (S)/Big Boss Man (S)/I Can't Help It (S) DOSD-2051 - Head First - Roy Head [1977] The Door I Used to Close/The Most Wanted Woman In Town/Pledging My Love/Deep Elem Blues/I'll Take It//Bridge for Crawling Back/Precious Time/Please James/Ain't It Funny (How Time Haven't Changed)/Remember Her. DOSD-2052 - Sweet Sensuous Feeling - Sue Richards [1976] DOSD-2053 - Rainbows and Tears - Ray Price [1976] (8-76, #45 C&W) DOSD-2054 - Roy Clark In Concert - Roy Clark [1976] (7-76, #14 C&W) DOSD-2055 - Lone Star Beer and Bob Wills Music - Red Steagall [1976] (7-76, #27 C&W) DOSD-2056 - Turn On To Tommy Overstreet - Tommy Overstreet [1976] (10-76, #46 C&W) DOSD-2057 - Texas Rock For Country Rollers - Doug Sahm [1976] I Love the Way You Love/Cowboy Peyton Place/Give Back the Key to My Heart/Wolverton Mountain/Texas Ranger Man//Floatway/I'm Missing You/Gene Thomas Medley: Sometimes, Cryin' Inside/Country Groove/You Can't Hide a Redneck (Under that Hippy Hair) DOSD-2058 - Bionic Banjo - Buck Trent [1976] (8-76, #43 C&W) DOSD-2059 - All These Things - Joe Stampley [1976] (7-76, #4 C&W) All These Things/Cry Like A Baby/A Real Woman/Soft As A Rose/The Night Time And My Baby/Everything I Own/I Can't Help Myself/You Make Life Easy/Unchained Melody/A Night Of Loving/All The Praises. DOSD-2060 - Back In The Swing of Things - Hank Thompson [1976] (12-76, #48 C&W) DOSD-2061 - If You're Ever In Texas - Freddy Fender [1976] (11-76, #170; 10-76, #4 C&W) Don't Do It Darling/It's All In The Game/San Antonio Lady/What A Difference A Day Made/Living It Down/Pass Me By (If You're Only Passing Through)/If You're Ever In Texas/Sometimes/Just One Time/It's Too Late/50's Medley: Donna-For Sentimental Reasons-You're Mine-Cherry Pie-Sincerely- Earth Angel- Angel Baby-Daddy's Home. DOSD-2062 - Hank 'N' Me - Ray Price [1976] (11-76, #42 C&W) Why Don't You Love Me/I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry/Jambalaya/I Can't Help It/Your Cheatin' Heart/Hey, Good Lookin'/Kaw- liga/A Mansion On The Hill/Half As Much/Cold, Cold Heart/You Win Again. DOSD-2063 - Crash - Billy "Crash" Craddock [1976] (11-76, #8 C&W) Broken Down In Tiny Pieces/Don Juan/In The Middle Of The Night/A Tear Fell/Footprints On The Windshield Upside Down/Shake It Easy/There's More To Her Than Meets The Eye/The Water's Too Rough Tonight/Two Pretty Words That Do Not Rhyme/Just A Little Thing/Why'd The Last Time Have To Be The Best. DOSD-2064 - Visions - Don Williams [1976] (2-77, #4 C&W) Time On My Hands/I'll Forgive But I'll Never Forget/I'm Getting Good At Missing You/In The Mornin'/Missing You Missing Me//Some Broken Hearts Never Mend/Fallin' In Love Again/We Can Sing/I'll Need Someone To Hold Me (When I Cry)/Expert At Everything/Cup 'O Tea. DOSD-2065 - Doin' What I Feel - Narvel Felts [1976] (10-76, #26 C&W) Just For Me/Warm And Tender Love/Empty Chair/Remember/I Don't Hurt Anymore//The Feelin's Right/Somewhere Between The Laughter And The Tears/Stand By Me/Another Crazy Dream/When We Were Together. DOSD-2066 - A Head of His Time - Roy Head [1977] One Night/I Love Her Like a Summer In The Country/Going Down Slow/Angel With a Broken Wing/Just Because//Georgia on My Mind/Medley: Blue Moon Of Kentucky, When My Blue Moon Turns to Gold Again/Till The Storm Is Gone/Baby Please Don't Stone Me Anymore/You'll Never Walk Alone. DOSD-2067 - Midnight Angel - Barbara Mandrell [1976] (12-76, #24 C&W) DOSD-2068 - Texas Red - Red Steagall [1976] (12-76, #36 C&W) DOSD-2069 - The Thompson Touch - Hank Thompson [1977] DOSD-2070 - The Touch of Felts - Narvel Felts [1977] (4-77, #30 C&W) DOSD-2071 - Vintage '77 - Tommy Overstreet [1977] (2-77, #26 C&W) DOSD-2072 - My Music and Me/Vocal & Instrumental - Roy Clark [1977] (5-77, #38 C&W) 2-LP set. First LP is vocal, second is instrumental. DOSD-2073 - Reunited - Ray Price & the Cherokee Cowboys [1977] (5-77, #47 C&W) DOSD-2075 - The Best of Donna Fargo - Donna Fargo [1977] (3-77, #9 C&W) Don't Be Angry/The Happiest Girl In The Whole USA/You Can't Be A Beacon (If Your Light Don't Shine)/Funny Face/How Close I Came (To Being Gone)/It Do Feel Good/A Song I Can Sing/Superman//I'd Love You To Want Me/Little Girl Gone/U.S. Of A. DOSD-2076 - Lovers Friends and Strangers - Barbara Mandrell [1977] DOSD-2077 - Oh Yeah! Banjos , Boisterous Ballads and Buck - Buck Trent [1977] DOSD-2078 - For All Our Cowboy Friends - Red Steagall & the Coleman County Cowboys [1977] DOSD-2079 - Best of Freddy Fender - Freddy Fender [1977] (5-77, #155; #4 C&W) Before The Next Teardrop Falls/Wasted Days And Wasted Nights/Secret Love/You'll Lose A Good Thing/Vaya Con Dios/Living It Down/Sugar Coated Love/Wild Side Of Life/Since I Met You Baby/The Rains Came/I Love My Rancho Grande/Mathilda. DOSD-2081 - Fine Lace & Homespun Cloth - George Hamilton IV [1977] DOSD-2082 - Live! - Billy Craddock [1977] (7-77, #11 C&W) DOSD-2083 - The Best of Johnny Carver - Johnny Carver [1977] (7-77, #46 C&W) DOSD-2084 - Kicked Back - Tom Bresh [1977] DOSD-2085 - Joe Barry - Joe Barry [1977] You're Why I'm So Lonely (S)/Tomorrow Never Comes (S)/Think It Over (S)/Always Late (With Your Kisses) (S)/I Almost Lost My Mind (S)//It's A Sin To Tell A Lie (S)/Cold Cold Heart (S)/The Prisoner's Song (S)/I Let happy Pass Me By (S)/If You Really Want Me To, I'll Go (S) DOSD-2086 - Hangin' 'Round - Tommy Overstreet [1977] (11-77, #44 C&W) DOSD-2087 - Country Comes to Carnegie Hall - Hank Thompson, Freddy Fender, Roy Clark, and Don Williams [1977] (10-77, #50 C&W) Recorded live on May 17, 1977. Each artist has one side of the 2-LP set. DOSD-2088 - Country Boy - Don Williams [1977] (10-77, #9 C&W) I'm Just A Country Boy/Louisiana Saturday Night/Overlookin' And Underthinkin'/Sneakin' Around/Look Around You//I've Got A Winner In You/Rake And Ramblin' Man/Too Many Tears/It's Gotta Be Magic/Falling In Love. DOSD-2089 - John Wesley Ryles - John Wesley Ryles [1977] (9-77, #39 C&W) DOSD-2090 - If You Don't Love Me - Freddy Fender [1977] (10-77, #34 C&W) DOSD-2091 - Doin' My Thing - Hank Thompson [1977] DOSD-2093 - Y'all Come Back Soon - Oak Ridge Boys [1977] (2-78, #120; 10-77, #8 C&W) Y'All Come Back Saloon/I'll Be True To You/An Old Time Family Bluegrass Band/Didn't She Really Thrill Them (Back In 1924)/Old Time Lovin'/Freckles/You're The One/Let Me Be The One/Easy/Emmylou. DOSD-2095 - Narvel - Narvel Felts [1977] DOSD-2097 - The First Time - Billy "Crash" Craddock [1977] (12-77, #37 C&W) DOSD-2098 - Love's Ups and Downs - Barbara Mandrell [1977] (1-78, #29 C&W) DOSD-2099 - Hookin' It - Roy Clark [1977] (1-78, #44 C&W) Reissue of the instrumental record that was part of DOSD-2072. DO-2101 - Feliz Navidad: Merry Christmas from Freddy Fender - Freddy Fender [1977] Thanks to Claus Simonsen and Tim Neely. On to the Dot Album Discography, Part 7 Misc Series & Related LPs and CDs.