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"Cocaine Blues" is a Western swing song written by Troy Junius Arnall, a reworking of the traditional song "Little Sadie." Roy Hogsed recorded a well known version of ...
Although he was active in the music business for only seven years, "Cocaine Blues" has been widely covered. [2] Roy Hogsed was the first artist to record the Rockabilly song Gonna Get Along Without You Now made famous by Teresa Brewer (1952), Patience and Prudence (1956), Skeeter Davis (1964), Trini Lopez (1967) and Viola Wills (1979).
1948 Cocaine Blues - Roy Hogsed, US Country #15. Music/lyrics attributed to T. J. 'Red' Arnall; 1940s Chain Gang Blues - Riley Puckett; 1940s Bad Lee Brown - Woody Guthrie and Cisco Houston; 1959 Badman Ballad - Cisco Houston The Cisco Special! album; 1960 Transfusion Blues - Johnny Cash Now, There Was A Song album, and on 1968 album At Folsom ...
The pals finally hit the stage on Wednesday night during a show in Santa Ana, California.
Memphis Jug Band The Best of the Memphis Jug Band (titled Cocaine Habit Blues) 1930 [5] [4] Lead Belly Leadbelly ARC and Library of Congress Recordings Vol. 1 (1934–1935) The Greenbriar Boys Ragged But Right! (1964) Jerry Garcia (with Mother McCree's Uptown Jug Champions) Mother McCree's Uptown Jug Champions (recorded 1964, released 1998)
Abner Wingate Jay (July 15, 1921 – November 4, 1993) [1] was an American multi-instrumentalist from Georgia, best known for performing eccentric, blues infused folk music as a one man band. His idiosyncratic lyrics and style have led some to consider his work outsider music; he considered himself to be "the last working Southern black minstrel".
Crossroads 2: Live in the Seventies is the seventh live album and a box set by Eric Clapton, released in 1996.Unlike the first Crossroads box set that encompasses more than three decades of Clapton's work, Crossroads 2 is a chronicle of Clapton's live shows between 1974 through 1978.
However, Jazz and Folk music tend to branch off of this popular trend and instead incorporate drugs like acid and cocaine into their lyrics. [ 42 ] In terms of a specific personal example, social activist and musician Linda McCartney is known for publicly remarked that she considered marijuana "pretty lightweight" while finding harder drugs to ...