Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The song is about what Williams Jr. would have done as President of the southern States had the South won the Civil War.He mentions all the states from the Confederacy as well as Kentucky and includes how he would make Elvis Presley's, Patsy Cline's, and Lynyrd Skynyrd's deaths national holidays.
The song debuted on the Hot Country Songs chart at No. 44 for the chart date April 23, 2011, and eventually reached No. 1 on that chart on December 3, 2011. [5] It debuted on the Billboard Hot 100 at No. 100 on July 9, 2011, eventually reaching No. 50 the same week it reach No. 1 on the Hot Country Songs chart. The song was certified Platinum ...
Music critic Pat McDonald of The Seattle Times, in his review of Walker's album, described the song as being "a story song so sickly sweet and unlikely, it comes off like an episode of Touched by an Angel." [3] Brian Wahlert of Country Standard Time said that the song was a "heartwarming story" and one of the stronger tracks on the album. [4]
The song is a satire of contemporary attitudes towards foreigners in the wake of losing the empire, with consequent uncertainty as to the position of the country on the new world. It is virulent against the other nations within the United Kingdom, referencing the common stereotype of the Welsh (as bad singers), the Scottish (as mean ) and the ...
"Right Round Here" is a song recorded by Canadian country music artist Dean Brody. The track was written by Stuart Walker and Jenna Walker of the Reklaws with Callum Maudsley, while Gavin Slate produced it. [1] It is the fourth single and title track off Brody's eighth studio album Right Round Here. [2]
Add more country songs to your playlist: All the Newest Hit Country Songs of 2024. The Greatest Country Love Songs of All Time. Sweet Country Songs About Daughters
Hank Williams, regarded as one of the most important singers and songwriters in the history of country music, gains his first number one. [1] [4] 1950: Lefty Frizzell, one of the most influential artists in the transition of country music to mainstream acceptance, reaches number one for the first time. [19] [20] 1951
"It's a Sin" is a country song written by country guitarist Zeb Turner and music publisher Fred Rose. The 1947 version by Eddy Arnold was his second number one on the Country & Western charts, spending five weeks at number one and a total of thirty-eight weeks on the chart. [4]