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"Cowboys Are Frequently, Secretly Fond of Each Other" is a 1981 song by Latin country musician Ned Sublette featuring a "lilting West Texas waltz", [1] widely known as the "gay cowboy song". [2] The song satirizes stereotypes associated with cowboys and gay men, with lyrics relating western wear to leather subculture : "What did you think all ...
"Don't Come Lookin'" is a song by American country music singer Jackson Dean. The song was first released as part of Dean's self-titled debut EP on April 30, 2021, [1] and serviced to country radio on February 22, 2022, [2] as the lead single from his debut studio album Greenbroke.
Eat Your Paisley! is the second studio album by the Dead Milkmen, released on Restless Records in 1986. [1] [2]"The Thing That Only Eats Hippies" and "Beach Party Vietnam" were included on the 1997 compilation Death Rides a Pale Cow: The Ultimate Collection; "Hippies" appeared on the 1998 compilation Cream of the Crop.
(In the same AllMusic review, Thom Jurek contends the song "sums up the way he views his life at this particular juncture, and given the lyrics, his mind couldn't have been a nice place to live.") [1] Conversely, Longhaired Redneck also contains songs with warmer themes, such as "Texas Lullaby" ("See those tumbleweeds blowin’, Lord it makes ...
"My Heroes Have Always Been Cowboys" was recorded by Waylon Jennings on the 1976 album Wanted! The Outlaws, and further popularized in 1980 by Willie Nelson as a single on the soundtrack to The Electric Horseman. "My Heroes Have Always Been Cowboys" was written by Sharon Vaughn and Nelson's version was his fifth number one on the country chart ...
Denver modified lyrics from Patrick Sky's parody version, from his album Songs That Made America Famous, in which the Okie wanted to "join the Ku Klux", burn the Hippies, and be loved, or he'd punch you in the mouth. The David Nelson Band has performed a song called "Humboldt County Hippie" at various performances. The song lyrics parallel and ...
"Cowboy Song" is a song by hard rock band Thin Lizzy that originally appeared on their 1976 album Jailbreak. Released as a single in an edited version, it reached No. 77 on the US charts, but at the time did not gain as much attention as two of their most popular songs on the same album, "The Boys Are Back in Town" and "Jailbreak".
A young poet encounters a cowboy in a local bar and is struck by his thin, worn appearance from years of hard work. Sensing the cowboy has words of inspiration to share, the poet approaches the cowboy, who responds that the only good things in life are "faster horses, younger women, older whiskey and more money."