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Guitar Town is the debut studio album from American singer-songwriter Steve Earle, released on March 5, 1986.It topped the Billboard country album charts, and the title song reached #7 on the country singles charts.
Earle's breakthrough album was the 1986 debut album Guitar Town; the eponymous lead single peaked at number 7 on the Billboard Hot Country chart. Since then, he has released 20 more studio albums and received three Grammy awards each for Best Contemporary Folk Album; he has four additional nominations in the same category.
"Guitar Town" is a song written and recorded by American singer-songwriter Steve Earle. It was released in June 1986 as the second single and title track from the album Guitar Town . The song reached number 7 on both the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart and the Canadian RPM Country Tracks chart. [ 2 ]
Ruminations of a Texas Guitar Slinger (books [92]) or Without Getting Killed or Caught (movie, [93] director: Tamara Saviano). Townes Van Zandt features prominently in I'll Be Here in the Morning author Brian T. Atkinson's subsequent books Looks Like Rain: The Songwriting Legacy of Mickey Newbury (Texas A&M University Press, 2021) and Love at ...
Lipps Inc. started as a project of Steven Greenberg when he was a wedding DJ who wanted to try his hand at writing disco songs. He had intended to use the name Lip Sync, but it was in use by another group, so instead he chose the homophone Lipps Inc. Greenberg was the sole member of the group until he met Cynthia Johnson while auditioning singers for his song "Rock It".
Roger Henry Brough Whittaker (22 March 1936 – 13 September 2023) was a Kenyan-born British singer-songwriter and musician. [3] His music is an eclectic mixture of folk music and popular songs, the latter variously in a crooning or in a schlager style.
On Wednesday’s episode of Superfan featuring Little Big Town, the country group told the story behind how they ended up recording a Taylor Swift-written song, and why they initially kept the ...
"Big Iron" is a country ballad song written and performed by Marty Robbins. Originally released as an album track on Gunfighter Ballads and Trail Songs in September 1959, it was released as a single in February 1960 with the song "Saddle Tramp" as the B-side single. [2]