Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Nashville Skyline is the ninth studio album by the American singer-songwriter Bob Dylan, released on April 9, 1969, by Columbia Records as LP record, reel-to-reel tape and audio cassette. Building on the rustic style he experimented with on John Wesley Harding , Nashville Skyline displayed a complete immersion into country music .
This is a list of songs set in or referring to the city of Nashville, ... "Nashville Skyline Rag" by Bob Dylan 1969, country rock from Nashville Skyline
"Tonight I'll Be Staying Here with You" is a song written by Bob Dylan from his 1969 album Nashville Skyline. [2] It was the closing song of the album. The song was the third single released from the album, after "I Threw It All Away" and "Lay Lady Lay", reaching #50 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart, and reaching the top 20 in other countries.
Rolling Stone magazine ranked the song 30th on a list of the "100 Greatest Bob Dylan Songs". In an article accompanying the list, Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards wrote: "While the British Invasion was going on, Bob Dylan was the man who really pulled the American point of view back into focus. At the same time, he had been drawing on ...
Nashville has been memorialized in dozens of songs, from Dylan's instrumental "Nashville Skyline Rag" to Jason & the Scorchers' cowpunk "Greetings from Nashville," along with plenty of odes about ...
The bridge of the song begins with the line "They say that nighttime is the right time". [5] Music critic Michael Gray notes that "Night Time Is the Right Time" is a blues lyric that may have been based on a much older song and that it is surprising to find such a lyric in one of Nashville Skyline's country songs. [6]
"Lay Lady Lay", sometimes rendered "Lay, Lady, Lay", [3] is a song written by Bob Dylan and originally released in 1969 on his Nashville Skyline album. [4] Like many of the tracks on the album, Dylan sings the song in a low croon, rather than in the high nasal singing style associated with his earlier (and eventually later) recordings. [5]
A lightning bolt streak down from the sky over Lower Broadway near the BellSouth building as high winds and rain swept through Davidson and surrounding counties on July 10, 2002.