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Jerry Merrick is an American singer-songwriter. His songs have been recorded by Richie Havens, B.J. Thomas, Jerry Jeff Walker, and Susan Tedeschi. Merrick is best known for writing "Follow," which appeared on the 1967 Richie Havens release ''Mixed Bag'' (MCA Verve/Folkways), which ''Rolling Stone'' called a "Sixties folk epic."〔Barry Walters, "''Hope and Desire'':Review", ''Rolling Stone'', November 17, 2005 ((link ))〕 Havens also performed the song in concert appearances at the Newport Folk Festival and Carnegie Hall. The piece has since appeared within the soundtrack of several films.〔(Jerry Merrick page ) at Sutherlandrecords.com〕 Subsequently, Merrick went on to record an album of original compositions for Mercury Records, released in 1969. Following this he moved his family away from New York City and teamed up briefly with fellow Mercury artist Kenny Rankin to appear on ''The Tonight Show,'' and open for Flip Wilson in various venues throughout the US. However, a decision to focus on his growing family eventually led him to withdraw from the music industry. Meanwhile, his song "Guess I'll Pack My Things," had been recorded by Tom Ghent on his self-titled debut for Bill Cosby's Tetragrammaton Records. Apparently, this led to the song (and arrangement) being included by B.J. Thomas on his 1970 Scepter album, ''Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head.'' Jerry Jeff Walker later recorded Merrick's "The Stranger (He Was The Kind)" on his double album "A Man Must Carry On." It served as an introduction and conclusion in his tribute to beloved Texas poet Hondo Crouch. Walker also included "Follow" on his Electra release, "Jerry Jeff." In 1999 Merrick located temporarily in Nashville, Tennessee. During this time he recorded "Suddenly I'll Know You," produced by Tom Ghent on his Sutherland Records label. == Discography == * ''Follow'' (1968, Mercury Records) * ''Suddenly I'll Know You'' (2002, Sutherland Records) 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Jerry Merrick」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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