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Foley's music is featured prominently in a feature-length documentary film about him entitled Blaze Foley: Duct Tape Messiah, released in 2011 by filmmaker Kevin Triplett. Foley's song "Let Me Ride in Your Big Cadillac" featured prominently at the end of the 8th episode (July 2016) of the first season of the television show Preacher.
Monroe was the narrator on a feature-length documentary film on the life and music of Blaze Foley, produced and directed by filmmaker Kevin Triplett. The film, released in 2011, was titled: Blaze Foley: Duct Tape Messiah. [13]
Spiderwood Studios is a motion picture, television, music and animation studio that opened in 2009 by producer Tommy G. Warren. [1] Located east of downtown Austin, Texas, it is situated on 164 acres of back lot alongside the Colorado River, and is the state’s largest privately owned studio.
Creative Loafing's James Kelly gave the album 4 out of 5 stars and called it "a very fitting and long-overdue tribute." [7] Robert Christgau gave it an A− and wrote that on the album, Morlix and his drummer "sink into a slough of despond that starts feeling right comfy before the record rises up with 'Small Town Hero,' in which the duct tape abuser gets the last word on the high school ...
Blaze Foley: Duct Tape Messiah: Line producer 2013 Good Night: Executive producer 2014 Kumiko, the Treasure Hunter: Producer Thank You a Lot: Producer 2017 Mr. Roosevelt: Producer Yeah, So I've got This Searing Pain (Short) Director 2018 Damsel: Executive producer 2021 She's Never Coming Back (Video Short) Director Depressions of the Mind ...
Tommy G. Warren is an American screenwriter, director and producer. Warren is also CEO/President of TWarren Investments, inc. founded in 1975. Tommy Warren began working in film and video in the 1970s.
Ben Dickey (born 1977) [1] is an American actor and musician best known for playing Blaze Foley in the 2018 biographical drama Blaze. [2] [3] [4] [5] For his ...
The title song is a cover of a 1979 song written and recorded by Texas songwriter Blaze Foley. Haggard had previously recorded the song as a duet with American country singer Willie Nelson on their 1987 album, Seashores of Old Mexico , peaking at number 58 on the 1987 Billboard Hot Country Songs singles chart.