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According to Snow, he proposed the song for his first session for RCA Records in 1949, but recording director Stephen H. Sholes turned it down. "Later on, in the spring of 1950, in Nashville, Mr. Sholes had not remembered the song, so I recorded it," Snow recalled.
"Free and Easy (Down the Road I Go)" is a song co-written and recorded by American country music artist Dierks Bentley. It was released in June 2007 as the third single from his 2006 album Long Trip Alone. It became his fifth Number One single on the U.S. Billboard Hot Country Songs charts.
"Roll On down the Highway" peaked at No. 14 on the US Billboard Hot 100 on March 1, 1975. [3] It reached No. 8 on the Cash Box Top 100 singles, and No. 4 on the Canadian RPM chart, and gave the band their second — and final — hit in the United Kingdom, reaching No. 22 in the UK Singles Chart .
"Movin' On" is a song written and recorded by American country music singer Merle Haggard and The Strangers.It was released in May 1975 as the third single and partial title track from the album Keep Movin' On.
A dozen times of love he'd try to speak, And then the radiator it would leak, And then he'd have to get under, Get out and get under, And fix up his automobile. To kiss and squeeze he'd boldly get to work, And then the brakes would slip there'd be a jerk, And then he'd have to get under, Get out and get under, And fix up his automobile.
This variant is played during the westbound portion of the movie. The lyric "East bound and down -- loaded up and truckin'" is changed to "West bound and down -- eighteen wheels a-rollin'." The music and the rest of the lyrics remain the same. A cover was recorded in 2005 by Canadian country music group The Road Hammers.
"This Wheel's on Fire" is a song written by Bob Dylan and Rick Danko. [1] It was originally recorded by Dylan and the Band during their 1967 sessions, portions of which (including this song) comprised the 1975 album, The Basement Tapes. [2]
"Roll On (Eighteen Wheeler)" was the story of a trucker who drives an over-the-road semitrailer truck to support his wife and three children.. In the song's first verse, the man (referred to only as "Daddy") leaves for a several-day trip through the Midwest.