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Hank Williams Jr., Barry Beckett In late 1986, Hank Williams Jr. recorded the song along with Reba McEntire , Tom Petty , Reverend Ike , and Willie Nelson . This version was the most successful, going to No. 1 on the country chart for two weeks.
Montana Cafe is the thirty-ninth studio album by American musician Hank Williams Jr. It was released by Warner / Curb in July 1986. "Country State of Mind," "Mind Your Own Business" and "When Something Is Good (Why Does It Change)" were released as singles.
The Bocephus Box is a box set of songs recorded by country music artist Hank Williams, Jr. Produced by Jimmy Guterman, it was originally released in 1992 by Capricorn Records, and re-released in 2000 by Curb Records, with a slightly different track list.
Homesick (lyrics by Williams; music composed by Hank Williams, Jr.) Honey, Do You Love Me, Huh? (co-written with Curley Williams) Honky Tonk Blues; Honky Tonkin' How Can You Refuse Him Now; How Many Times Have You Broken My Heart? (lyrics by Williams, recorded by Gillian Welch and Norah Jones for The Lost Notebooks of Hank Williams) Howlin' at ...
The Complete Hank Williams is a 1998 box set collecting almost all of the recorded works of country music legend Hank Williams, ... "Mind Your Own Business" – 2:53
"Mind Your Own Business" (TSR episode), an episode of the American television sitcom That's So Raven "Mind Your Own Business" (song), a 1949 song by Hank Williams "Mind Your Own Business", a song by Living Colour from their 1993 album Stain "Mind Your Own Business", a song by Delta 5, covered by Chicks on Speed, Le Shok and Pigface
Schiller is Williams's now former financial advisor at Wells Fargo. In February, the bank filed court documents claiming that Williams is "of unsound mind" and the "victim of undue influence and ...
Both charts were topped by Hank Williams' "Lovesick Blues"; the song posted 4,182 points on the retail sales chart and 1,716 points on the juke box chart -- nearly doubling the point total of any other song. Williams also posted the No. 5 hit on the year-end charts with "Wedding Bells". [1]