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Memories: The Autobiography of Ralph Emery (G K Hall Large Print Book Series)

Authors: Ralph Emery, Tom Carter
Publisher: G K Hall & Co
Category: Book

List Price: $20.95
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Avg. Customer Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 2094111

Format: Large Print
Media: Hardcover
Pages: 410
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.6
Dimensions (in): 9.8 x 6.5 x 1

ISBN: 0816155801
Dewey Decimal Number: 781.642092
EAN: 9780816155804
ASIN: 0816155801

Publication Date: December 1992
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Memories the Autobiography of Ralph Emery
  • Paperback - Memories: The Autobiography of Ralph Emery
  • Audio Cassette - Memories: The Autobiography of Ralph Emery (Spoken Word Audio Csst)
  • Paperback - Memories: The Autobiography of Ralph Emery

Similar Items:

  • More Memories
  • The View from Nashville: On The Record With Country Music's Greatest Stars
  • 50 Years Down a Country Road
  • More Memories/Large Print (G K Hall Large Print Book Series)
  • Bus Fare to Kentucky: The Autobiography of Skeeter Davis

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
An autobiography of the radio and TV personality who popularized country music retraces Ralph Emery's life and career from his troubled childhood through his four marriages and his success as the host of "Nashville Now." (Biography).


Customer Reviews:

1 out of 5 stars Not worthy of a autobiography.   March 19, 2008
I have had little respect for Emery since I've heard and read about how rude he was to Gram Parsons in a interview in the 60's, which carried over to the way Gram Parsons was treated when he performed on The Grand Old Opry. It shows just how narrow and closeminded he could be toward a new talent trying to make it, who didn't meet his criteria. Like he is one to judge talent. Gram Parsons was a great talent, and his music still carries. He really didn't need a nod from Emery, of all people. By the way, Gram's Nubie suit hangs in the Country Music Hall Of Fame after all. He loved county music.


5 out of 5 stars a man digs into his inner self   November 27, 2007
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

i believe ralph dug deep to be truthful about himself. what some see as conceit, i see as insecurity, a very deep insecurity. Embrassed by a drunken father (it takes a lot of guts for a child-adult to admit their father was a town drunk) that has to be so hurtful. Overly concerned about his looks in a most negative way, the only happiness in his young life was when he lived with his maternal grandparents Fuqua. He presents himself in an honest way. I enjoyed reading about his guest on his raido talk show.........good book.


1 out of 5 stars a self serving autobiography from a self-serving man   April 27, 2005
 2 out of 4 found this review helpful

One only has to read this hodge podge of vignettes from one of the most self-serving, conceited individuals in country music to realize that Skeeter Davis told the truth about him in her autobiography. This man is arrogant and prejudiced in every sense of the words. Hillbilly music put your name of the map Mr. Emery......and the same people you met on your way up are the same ones you will meet on your way down. Shame on you and your bigoted, one sided views!


4 out of 5 stars memories are made of this and that   January 14, 2004
 0 out of 2 found this review helpful

maybe i'm naive but i think Ralph Emery is first and foremost a broadcaster. he did interviews and played country songs for most of his radio career (dating from the mid '50s to the early '90s). His broadcasting skills border on the "tough" talking style of Mike Wallace. Emery clearly stated that he wanted to bring 'style' or 'respect' to the genre, commenting that in urban America country music is seen as "redneck" music for the un-educated. Emery's vision, from what i've read, was to showcase country singers as witty and topical/informed as the pop artists seemed to be. Emery, as he should be, prides himself on his Mike Wallace style. He talks about his short stints as gospel and rock stations before migrating to country stations. This doesn't indicate that Emery isn't a country music fan. it shows that Emery was a BROADCASTER first...one that would take the work anywhere it was available. his on-air presence obviously galvanized his listeners because he stuck with the country format throughout his career and on into television. This book is called Memories. It's an autobiography of Ralph Emery and the celebrities/artists he's been associated with. Everything in the book are 'memories' from Ralph. His child-hood upbringing and his insecurities are in the beginning chapters. His opinion of ex-wife Skeeter Davis is in no way less harsh than her opinions of him that i've heard her say on numerous occasions on the Opry. The little typ-o's from the book brought up by the other reviewer, saying Fan Fair is in July and not June or when Keith Whitley won or didn't win an award, seem petty when looking at the book's overall purpose. i will admit that Ralph can be a bit jaded, which some take as "arrogant". You must understand that in Ralph's profession he has to put up with a lot of BS from his bosses, advertisers, record labels, critics, etc. A person who has to deal with that, at the same time doing a job they love to do, it tends to dampen the 'mood' a little bit. As a result, a person becomes depressed or jaded because of all the crap they have to put up with simply for an interview to get set up. In Emery's case, he hated record labels that over-hyped their artists. On his shows, a listener got to hear a country singer "up close" with all that industry hype stripped from them. He wouldn't allow the artist he interviewed to hold the airwaves hostage with an on-slaught of promotion of their new album or single. Instead, Ralph would promote the product periodically throughout an interview but that was it. the remainder of the interview was Ralph talking to the guest about their private life or their experiences on the road or making an album...never taking it to level 2, always keeping the flow of the conversation 'loose' where it never turned into hyping. if some find this style of "no BS" professionalism arrogant, well, i feel sorry for you. i give it 4 stars because the segment on the great Ray Stevens could've been longer and more in-depth because Ralph is the only one who actually knows legitimate Ray Stevens stories.


2 out of 5 stars Some Interesting Stories But Overall Disappointing   July 31, 2000
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Back when The Nashville Network cable channel was new and still country, "Nashville Now" was its flagship program. Host Ralph Emery seemed like a friendly, easy going member of the extended family. In this collection of "Memories" (most of which are the memories of what other people did) he comes across as arrogant, self-serving, and somewhat bitter.

He makes insidious allegations against ex-wife Skeeter Davis, and while there are two sides to every story, her tale is not needed for this version to sound dubious on its own merits. Among the anecdotes he includes are juicy vignettes about many country singers. Some such as Merle Haggard's lamentation seems like they were obviously intended to have been kept off the record.

Perhaps the book's biggest drawback is that it lends credence to the long whispered rumor that Ralph Emery was never a true country fan. In it he refers to the late Keith Whitley as having won the CMA Horizon award the year before he died. In reality, he was nominated but lost. The supposed epitome of country radio also states that Nashville's annual thank you party Fan Fair is held every year in early July, but it is actually held in early June. These embarrassing misstatements suggest that the editors were also not well versed in country music info.

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