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"Harry Caray was my dad and my hero. He was a larger than life human being who loved baseball. If you loved Harry, you will love this tribute." --Skip Caray "He’s been gone for over eight years now, and I still think about him every day. Producing this CD allowed me to remember Harry Caray fondly - all the great highlights and energy and laughter and the love of baseball. I hope listening to it makes you feel the same way." --Pat Hughes
Pat Hughes, the voice of the Cubs on WGN Radio, presents a new CD tribute to legendary broadcaster Harry Caray. Harry Caray could do it all. He had a distinctive voice, charisma, enthusiasm, style, humor, longevity and consistency. He had that great home run call - “It might be! It could be! IT IS! A home run!” - and the talent to make even a dull game come to life.
The CD is full of great memories from Harry's career, including: His great call of Stan Musical’s 3,000th hit in 1958, Harry’s rousing play-by-play work in the 1964 Cardinals World Championship season, and the famous 1984 Ryne-Sandberg-2-homers-off-Bruce-Sutter game. Plus lots of funny moments with Harry. TRACK LISTING:
To order the Harry Caray CD, visit the Baseball Voices website. There, you'll also find Pat's other CD tributes to legendary baseball voices. |
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Baseball Voices with Pat Hughes Hall of Fame Series presents ... Harry Caray "Voice of the Fans"
Copyright © 2012, WGN Radio
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This CD traces his career. Included are the stories of Harry’s humble beginnings, his start in broadcasting, and his ascension to Cardinal Radio in 1945. If you are a younger fan and your main Harry Caray memory is of him as a venerable Cubs TV announcer, wait until you hear his work with the Cardinals in the 1950s and ‘60s. In the mid-’70s, Harry started singing “Take Me Out to the Ballgame” at the old Comiskey Park. You'll hear the story of how this began. In 1982 Harry was named the “Voice of the Chicago Cubs” on both WGN-TV and Radio. He immediately connected with Cub fans. As big as he had been in the 1950s and ‘60s on Cardinals Radio, Harry became bigger - gigantic, even - with the Chicago Cubs.