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DAVE & BECKY EVERETT MEDICINE SHOW 45 RPM EP & SLEEVE - Katona U-15454

$24.95

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There is only 1 left in stock.

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Full refund available within 30 days

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Shipping options

Seller handling time is 2 business days Details
FREE via Unspecified shipping type to United States

Return policy

Full refund available within 30 days

Purchase protection

Payment options

PayPal accepted
PayPal Credit accepted
Venmo accepted
PayPal, MasterCard, Visa, Discover, and American Express accepted
Maestro accepted
Amazon Pay accepted
Nuvei accepted

Item traits

Category:

Vinyl Records

Quantity Available:

Only one in stock, order soon

Condition:

Used

Speed:

45 RPM

Record Size:

7"

Duration:

EP

Listing details

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View seller policies

Posted for sale:

More than a week ago

Item number:

287227317

Item description

Dave and Becky "The Everetts" featured on "Doc" Tommy Scott's Last Real Medicine Show. Katona U-15454 7" 45 rpm extended play record in original over-sized "fitted" picture sleeve. Sleeve measures 8.5" x 8.5". Tracks include: Mule Train, Herbs Berries Wine, Lovers All the Way, You Sure as Heck Can Break a Heart. Condition: Record is VG+ to VG++. Sleeve has a vertical and horizontal fold. Comments: Dave and Becky Everett performed as the Everetts and were a featured duo on "Doc" Tommy Scott's Last Real Medicine Show. The wagons and horses may have been traded for tour buses, and the purveyors of snake oil replaced by highly skilled pickers and flutists, but Tommy Scott and his Old Time Medicine Show Band provided old-school entertainment every bit as enjoyable as their nineteenth-century travelling namesakes. Combining the sincerity and musicality of country music with uplifting pop, this poster will definitely have you tapping your feet. Tommy Scott began his career in entertainment playing guitar and singing for local square dances. He performed on a radio broadcast for the first time in 1933, and, in 1936, joined Doc Chamberlain's Medicine Show, which had toured the South since 1890. In 1938, Scott took over the show, which was later known as Ramblin' Tommy Scott's Hollywood Hillbilly Jamboree. Scott performed on radio station WWVA in Wheeling, W.Va., where he developed characters and routines that were later featured in his live, radio, and television appearances, including a blackface character named Lightning and a ventriloquist act featuring the puppet Luke McLuke. Scott wrote a number of hit country and western songs and appeared in several feature films. The Ramblin' Tommy Scott Show, which began airing in 1948, was the first country music show on television. During the 1950s, Scott had another show on television called Tommy Scott's Smokey Mountain Jamboree.