Open Up Your Heart is an album by Buck Owens and his Buckaroos, released in 1966. It reached Number one on the Billboard Country Albums chart. It was re-released on CD in 1995 by Sundazed Records while it is still firmly within his trademark Bakersfield sound, there are slight moves away from his twangy, purer material and toward material that was just a little sillier and a little poppier.
Caller – Tommy Stoye. B. Light In The Window. Companies, etc. Published By – Blue Book Music. Music By – Frank Messina. Square dance instruction record with call sheet. A: With Calls B: Instrumental.
On Open Your Heart, the Men's second record for the Sacred Bones label, the Brooklyn band build on the momentum of 2011's menacing Leave Home to deliver a muscular, dynamic tribute to all things rock
Track Name: Milkychan feat. 0P2C - Open up your Heart. It's been just another day where just one too many of these "friends" have dropped their face, let it fall down Pictures end in piles of ash, no reflection left of who I am but I'll accept - if that might help to save you. Hey, come up close, listen now, hear me out and let me just explain what it meant that we had I'll move on and go ahead.
Open Up Your Heart arrived in 1966, in the midst of Buck Owens' remarkable streak of success - success that would propel him to the stage of Carnegie Hall in March of that year. This album followed a few months later, and while it is still firmly within his trademark Bakersfield sound, there are slight moves away from his twangy, purer material and toward material that was just a little sillier and a little poppier
Open Your Heart is both tremendously physical and friendly, knocking you on your ass one second, then immediately helping you back up to put a beer in your hand. And I can't stress the word "party" enough, because it's difficult to remember a rock record that managed to be this much fun without resorting to cheerleading. Of course, the question with Open Your Heart is how it can manage to be such a thrill despite conceivably doing nothing actually new. Not to demystify what the Men do here or downplay the artistry, but these guys strike me as fixers and problem solvers. I hear a band analyzing modes that have just become tired and stodgy and delivering them back running smoother than ever. Liked the coed ragers from the last Fucked Up album, but wish it wasn’t neutered by thousands of overdubs? Have a blast with the all-id caterwaul of "Animal".