Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"Oh Lonesome Me" is a popular song written and recorded in December 1957 by Don Gibson with Chet Atkins [5] producing it for RCA Victor in Nashville. Released in 1958, the song topped the country chart for eight non-consecutive weeks.
Donald Eugene Gibson (April 3, 1928 [1] – November 17, 2003) was an American songwriter and country musician.A Country Music Hall of Fame inductee, Gibson wrote such country standards as "Sweet Dreams" and "I Can't Stop Loving You", and enjoyed a string of country hits ("Oh Lonesome Me") from 1957 into the mid-1970s.
"I Can't Stop Loving You" is a popular song written and composed by the country musician Don Gibson from his 1958 album Oh Lonesome Me, who first recorded it on December 3, 1957, for RCA Victor Records. It was released in 1958 as the B-side of "Oh Lonesome Me", becoming a double-sided country hit single.
Oh Lonesome Me is a studio album by American country singer Don Gibson, released in 1958. It is an example of the beginning of the Nashville Sound . On November 17, 1958, it was rated No. 1 on Billboard magazine's "Favorite C&W Albums" based on the magazine's annual poll of country and western disc jockeys.
The album was issued as a vinyl LP, with six songs on side one and five songs on side two of the record. [3] The album peaked at number 14 on the Billboard Country Albums chart in July 1972, after spending 12 weeks on the list. [4] The project's only single release was the title track, which was released in February 1972. [5]
"Oh Lonesome Me" Tanya Tucker Don Gibson: My Turn: 2009 [6] "Oh What a Love" Tanya Tucker Jerry Laseter Hank Cochran: Tanya: 2002 [1] "Oh What It Did to Me" Tanya Tucker Jerry Crutchfield: Tennessee Woman: 1990 [16] "Old Dan Tucker's Daughter" Tanya Tucker Curly Putman Buddy Killen: Would You Lay with Me (In a Field of Stone) 1974 [19]
The Little House We Built (Just o'er the Hill) (co-written with Don Helms) Little Paper Boy; The Log Train; Long Gone Lonesome Blues; Lord, Build Me a Cabin in Glory; Lord, I'm Coming Home; Lost on the River (with Audrey Williams) The Love that Faded (lyrics by Williams, recorded by Bob Dylan for The Lost Notebooks of Hank Williams) Low and ...
In 1966 Finnegan moved to Sweden, [3] where Dear One was a #1 hit in 1962 and he had more hits, for example "Oh, Lonesome me (peaked at #9), "Pretty Suzie Sunshine (peaked at #7) and "I like it like that" (peaked at #5). Due to his great successes in Sweden, Finnegan visited the country for tours and became involved in the Swedish pop industry.