Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Meredith Cody Jinks [1] (born August 18, 1980) is an American outlaw country music singer and songwriter. [2] His breakout 2016 album, I'm Not the Devil , reached No. 4 on the Billboard Country Albums chart, while a number of other albums such as Lifers , After the Fire , and The Wanting reached No. 2 on the same chart.
"Sugar Mama" or "Sugar Mama Blues" is a blues standard. [1] Called a "tautly powerful slow blues" by music journalist Charles Shaar Murray , [ 2 ] it has been recorded by numerous artists, including early Chicago bluesmen Tampa Red , Sonny Boy Williamson I , and Tommy McClennan .
Ward Davis is an American singer-songwriter from Monticello, Arkansas.Davis has had songs recorded by Willie Nelson, Merle Haggard, Trace Adkins, Wade Hayes, Sammy Kershaw, Bucky Covington, Jimmie Van Zant, Buddy Jewel, Carolina Rain, The Roys, Cody Jinks, Whitey Morgan, Paul Cauthen and others. in 2016, Davis co-wrote "I’m Not The Devil" with Cody Jinks, which went to No. 4 on the Billboard ...
For more information, visit www.lvrrhs.org or call 585-289-9149. If you have an event you'd like to see listed in the "Things to Do" column, email Mike Murphy at mmurphy@messengerpostmedia.com .
That slight hint of self-awareness helps give The Wanting a lightness during its songs of alcoholism, loneliness, and lost love, a lightness that helps make the record a balm during tough times." [ 2 ] Josh Schott of Country Perspective similarly gave the album a favorable review, rating it a "8/10" and writing that "The Wanting is an album ...
What they heard may have been "One Dime Blues", which was recorded by Blind Lemon Jefferson in the 1920s and by Blind Willie McTell as "Last Dime Blues" in the late 1940s. The song's lyrics included the line "Mama, don't treat your daughter mean". [3] According to Ruth Brown, the lyrics originated from a black church spiritual.
In 1946, the English lyrics were written by Harold Barlow and Phil Brito who had their popular recording hit the charts in May 1946 under the title of "Mama". British singer David Whitfield also had a hit with the song, which reached number 12 in the UK Singles Chart in 1955. [6] The British lyrics did differ from the American ones.
Delta Momma Blues was recorded at Century Sound of Fifty-Second Street in New York, where Van Zandt lived for three years in the early seventies. It was produced by Van Zandt's manager Kevin Eggers and Ron Frangipane, a pianist and string arranger who had studied under Igor Stravinsky and had previously worked with the Monkees, Dusty Springfield, John Lennon and The Rolling Stones.