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Batten the Hatches is the debut album by American singer-songwriter Jenny Owen Youngs.Originally self-released in 2005 by Youngs, it was reissued with the bonus track "Drinking Song" two years later by the Nettwerk label.
"Fuck Was I" is a song by Jenny Owen Youngs, from her 2005 album Batten the Hatches. Its name refers to the phrase "What the fuck was I thinking?" [1] Youngs wrote it "between (her) junior and senior years at SUNY Purchase". [2] She is accompanied by Dan Romer and Patrick Petty (cello). [3]
Jenny Owen Youngs (born November 22, 1981) is an American singer-songwriter. [1] She has released four albums and a handful of EPs both independently and via Nettwerk Records , [ 2 ] [ 3 ] and has toured worldwide.
Owen sent "11 Beers" to the Reklaws, and Stuart Walker stated he initially was scared of the title as the duo has already recorded several drinking songs, including their hit "Can't Help Myself". [3] They were nonetheless intrigued as the song was written by several well-known Nashville writers including Hardy , a fellow country artist who sang ...
"If You Don't Start Drinkin' (I'm Gonna Leave)" is a rock song by American blues rock band George Thorogood and the Destroyers, released in January 1991 as the lead single from their album Boogie People by EMI America.
Taylor Swift’s song “Fortnight” is getting a lot of attention for lyrics that include the line “I was a functioning alcoholic.” Swift, who co-wrote the track, hasn’t said whether she ...
An 18th century drinking song. A drinking song is a song that is sung before or during alcohol consumption. Most drinking songs are folk songs or commercium songs, and may be varied from person to person and region to region, in both the lyrics and in the music. In Germany, drinking songs are called Trinklieder.
"I Used to Work in Chicago" (Roud 4837) is a drinking song.It was written by songwriter and entertainer Larry Vincent.The earliest printed date for the song is March 1945 in the underground mimeographed songbook Songs of the Century, however versions of the song circulated "on the street" as early as 1938 according to the Digital Tradition Folk Music Database. [1]