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Can't Have Mine (Find You a Girl) Can't Keep Waiting; Can't Shake You; Can't You See (The Marshall Tucker Band song) Carried Away (George Strait song) Catch (Brett Young song) Chasin' You; Circles (Jana Kramer song) The Climb (song) Colder Weather; Come a Little Closer (Dierks Bentley song) Come Over (Kenny Chesney song) Come Wake Me Up
CMT Pure Country, the all-music counterpart to CMT, relegated its classic country programming to a daily half-hour block known as "Pure Vintage" before abandoning classic country altogether by 2015. (Complicating matters somewhat is a relative lack of music videos for country music songs before the 1980s.)
Alice ("There's a New Girl in Town") – (music by David Shire) (lyrics by Alan and Marilyn Bergman) (sung by Linda Lavin) Alien Nation – Kenneth Johnson and David Kurtz; Aliens in the Family – Todd Rundgren; All at No. 20 – Denis King; All Creatures Great and Small – ("Piano Parchment") by Johnny Pearson; Allegra's Window – Dan ...
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"The Wheels on the Bus" is an American folk song written by Verna Hills (1898–1990). The earliest known publishing of the lyrics is the December 1937 issue of American Childhood, [1] originally called "The Bus", with the lyrics being "The wheels of the bus", with each verse ending in lines relevant to what the verse spoke of, as opposed to the current standard "all through the town" (or "all ...
The song was referenced beforehand in the show as well, during episode 6 of season 5, "Don't Cross the Sh*t Line." While in J-ROCs trailer filming a "greasy film" Ray drinks a whole quart of liquor and rolls backwards into the shot where Bubbles is introducing himself in Trailer Park Girls Gone Wild , where J-ROC calls Ray a ""Phantom 309 ...
A train song is a song referencing passenger or freight railroads, often using a syncopated beat resembling the sound of train wheels over train tracks.Trains have been a theme in both traditional and popular music since the first half of the 19th century and over the years have appeared in nearly all musical genres, including folk, blues, country, rock, jazz, world, classical and avant-garde.
"Dang Me" is a song by American country music artist Roger Miller, and 1964's Grammy Award winner for Best Country & Western Song. It was Miller's first chart-topping country hit and first Top Ten pop music hit, [2] whose "jazzy instrumental section" helped make it "the quintessential example of Miller's lighthearted humor, which brought him many more hits."