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Country Legends #25: Yes, Mr. Peters Traditional Cache

This cache is temporarily unavailable.

YetAnotherReviewer: This geocache has either:
-a low health geocache score
-numerous DNFs
-hasn't been found in a while
-damaged container
-full logbook
-inaccurate coordinates
-or has a combination of the these issues.

The issues are problematic enough to disable this geocache.

The cache owner needs to check on this cache ASAP and either replace it or archive it, after picking up any geo-litter. See the maintenance section of the Geocache Listing Requirements/Guidelines:visit link

I've added this cache to my watchlist, and I will check back within a month to be sure that the maintenance has been done. If there are extenuating circumstances, please post a note before I check back. In the meantime, I have temporarily disabled this listing. When the maintenance is completed, the owner can re-enable the listing by clicking on the link below the cache name.

If there is no response from the cache owner, then this geocache will most likely be archived.

Thanks,
YetAnotherReviewer
Volunteer Geocaching.com Reviewer
Known Virginia Geocaching Guidelines

More
Hidden : 4/5/2013
Difficulty:
2.5 out of 5
Terrain:
1 out of 5

Size: Size:   micro (micro)

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Geocache Description:


Welcome to the Country Legends Series.
 
In this series we will be referencing songs from the Legends of Country, Western, and the Bluegrass Music genres.
 
Each cache in this series will be different.  There will be different types, difficulties, terrains, and containers.  Each will have something to do with the song though, in one way or another.
 
We hope you have as much fun finding them as we have hiding them.
 

Yes, Mr. Peters by Roy Drusky & Priscilla Mitchell
 
About the artists:
 

Roy Drusky:

A singer/songwriter often called "the Perry Como of country music," Roy Drusky enjoyed success throughout the 1960s as a performer in the Nashville sound vein. Born June 22, 1930, in Atlanta, GA, Drusky's mother, a church organist, tried for years to interest her son in music, but throughout his childhood he focused the majority of his energies on sports. It was not until during a two-year stint in the U.S. Navy that he bought his first guitar, and soon after began performing for his fellow crew members.
 
After leaving the Navy, Drusky returned to college, and unsuccessfully tried out for baseball's Cleveland Indians. In 1951, he started his first band, the Southern Ranch Boys; the group's success on a Decatur, GA-radio talent show landed Drusky work as a DJ, where he attracted a substantial following among listeners. He also continued to perform in local clubs after the Southern Ranch Boys called it quits, and on the strength of a 1953 single, "Such a Fool," he was signed to Columbia Records in 1955.

After moving to Minneapolis to continue his work in radio, Drusky began headlining at the Twin Cities' prestigious Flame Club, where word of his talents began spreading to Nashville. As a result, Faron Young recorded Drusky's "Alone With You" in 1958; the single was the biggest of Young's career, topping the charts for 13 weeks. Soon after, Drusky moved to Nashville, and in 1960 released back-to-back Top Five hits, the honky tonk ballads "Another" and "Anymore," which led to an invitation to join the Grand Ole Opry. In the same year, he also released a hit duet with Kitty Wells, "I Can't Tell My Heart That."

In 1961, Drusky released the double-sided hit "I'd Rather Loan You Out"/"Three Hearts in a Tangle," and also issued his first LP, Anymore With Roy Drusky. The next year, he reached the Top Ten again with "Second Hand Rose," from the album It's My Way. Throughout the first half of the decade, he continued to release chart hits, peaking in 1965 with his lone number one, "Yes, Mr. Peters." He also issued two separate albums in 1964, Songs of the Cities and Yesterday's Gone. In 1965, Drusky appeared in his first film, White Lightnin' Express, and also sang the feature's title song; he later appeared in two other films, The Golden Guitar and Forty Acre Feud. In the middle of the decade, he also began recording with singer Priscilla Mitchell, and with her released two albums of duets, 1965's Love's Eternal Triangle and Together Again in 1966. In addition, Drusky began a career as a producer for acts like Pete Sayers and Brenda Byers.

As a recording artist, Drusky's success tapered off after 1965; although he released 11 chart hits between 1966 and 1969, only two, "Where the Blue and Lonely Go" and "Such a Fool," reached the Top Ten. However, in the early years of the next decade he made a comeback: 1970's "Long Long Texas Road," from the album All My Hard Times, was his first Top Five hit in six years. It was also his last, however, and as Drusky's brand of country fell victim to changing tastes, his singles and albums were less and less successful; after releasing two LPs in 1976, This Life of Mine and Night Flying, he returned to writing and producing. After remaining silent throughout the 1980s, he began a new sideline as a country-influenced gospel balladeer in the early 1990s. Roy Drusky passed away September 23, 2004.

 

Priscilla Mitchell:


Priscilla Mitchell (born September 18, 1941 in Marietta, Georgia) was an American country music singer. Ms Mitchell was a Rock 'n' Roll singer in the 1950s and became most popular as a duet performer when she cut a string of duet recordings in the 1960s with country singer Roy Drusky. Drusky and Mitchell recorded a series of hits; their best-selling recordings being country music "cheating songs", including their biggest hit together, "Yes Mr. Peters", released in 1965, becoming number 1 on the country charts. Ms. Mitchell has been married to country singer, song writer, and session guitarist Jerry Reed Hubbard since 1959 and was widowed on August 31, 2008, and is the mother of two daughters. Jerry Reed is noted for his recordings novelty songs (including Amos Moses, Lord Mr. Ford, She Got the Goldmine (I Got the Shaft), as well as well received guitar duet albums with Chet Atkins, and his acting roles (including the Smokey and the Bandit movies with Burt Reynolds).
 

Yes, Mr. Peters:
 

Hello
 
(Hello dear will the same place be alright)
Yes indeed, Mr. Peters I can work late tonight
(Dear is she near, can she hear what you say)
You're right Mr. Peters and I'm leaving right away


(Are you sure she's not listening on the other line)
No of course not Mr. Peters you can call me anytime
(What if she knows just where you go each time you get my call)
Don't worry Mr. Peters cause my wife don't mind at all


(Please hurry up dear cause I'm so in love with you)
I know exactly how you feel cause I feel the same way too


(Tell me dear how much longer must we live this life)
I don't know Mr. Peters but I should be there by nine
(Well don't be late I can't wait to be with you once more)
Don't worry Mr. Peters I'm just headin' for the door

 
Well yes Mr. Peters I'm just headin' for the door
 

The Cache:
 

This one is magnetic.
 

Congratulations to biblemanrick & sewwatt for the First to Find.

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Uvag vf va gur Ylevpf

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)