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"Golden Guitar" was released as the B-side to Anderson's major hit "I Love You Drops." It was issued by Decca Records in December 1965. [3] The song spent 13 weeks on the Billboard Hot Country Singles before reaching number 11 in April 1966. [4] It was later released on his 1965 studio album Bright Lights and Country Music. [2]
It has been speculated by fanzine writer Dave Lewis that the song was influenced by Neil Young. [5] The song alternates between soft and hard-rocking sections and changes in tempo, with the lighter sections employing a tremolo effect on the guitar, or possibly by running it through a Leslie speaker, to give an 'underwater talking' feel.
She Wears Red Feathers" first appeared on the UK's sheet music charts on February 21, 1953, and peaked at No. 3. February 1953 saw the only three recordings of the song issued in the UK: these were by Guy Mitchell, The Ray Ellington Quartet with The Peter Knight Singers, and Donald Peers with The Kordites. In May, Mitchell's version was issued ...
[5] [6] According to RIAA, she has sold 12.5 million albums (including three multi-platinum, four platinum and nine gold records) in the United States. [7] Her signature hit " Believe " has sold more than 11 million copies worldwide, and it is the UK's best-selling single by a female artist in history , [ 8 ] and one of the best-selling ...
Among his other early recordings are two duets with his childhood friend Charlie Feathers in 1969. Feathers counted Kimbrough as an early influence; Kimbrough gave Feathers some of his earliest lessons on the guitar. Kimbrough recorded little in the 1970s, contributing an early version of "Meet Me in the City" to a European blues anthology.
After leaving Atlantic, Dobson recorded an EP called New Caves under the name Deep Sea Diver. [4] She later formed a band under the Deep Sea Diver name consisting of herself on guitar, John Raines on bass and Peter Mansen on drums. [8] The band's full-length debut album, History Speaks, was self-released in February 2012. [9]
Going For Gold is a singles compilation album by the British rock band Shed Seven, released in May 1999 via Polydor Records.The album features sleevenotes written by Mark Sutherland, the former editor of Melody Maker, who refers to the LP as the band's "Best of Album", whereas the album artwork itself carries the sub-title The Greatest Hits.
"March to the Sea" is a song by American heavy metal band Baroness and the second single from the band's third studio album, Yellow & Green. The track received a digital retail release in June 2012. A promotional CD-R was distributed by the band's management company, Q Prime.