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Uneasy Rider. " Uneasy Rider " is a 1973 song written and performed by American singer and multi-instrumentalist Charlie Daniels. [3] It consists of a narrative spoken over a guitar melody, and is sometimes considered a novelty song. [4] It was released as a single and appeared on Daniels' album Honey in the Rock which is also sometimes known ...
Professional ratings. Honey in the Rock is the third studio album by American musician Charlie Daniels, released in 1973, appearing on the record label Kama Sutra Records. [3] It was re-released on Epic Records in 1976 under the title Uneasy Rider. [4]
Homesick Heroes is the fifteenth studio album by Charlie Daniels and the twelfth as the Charlie Daniels Band, released on August 15, 1988.The album is known for the band's cover of the Jimmy Dean classic, "Big Bad John," which also includes guest harmony vocals by The Oak Ridge Boys, and for the song "Uneasy Rider '88" which is musically and thematically similar to their renowned 1973 song ...
Full Moon: Release date: July 18, 1980 ... Memories, Memoirs and Miles – Songs of a Lifetime [14] Release date: October 24, 2017 ... 1973 "Uneasy Rider" 67 9 37 69 ...
Professional ratings. A Decade of Hits is a compilation album by The Charlie Daniels Band released on June 20, 1983. There were three new songs for the album, "Stroker's Theme (Theme from the movie, "Stroker Ace"), which was released as a single, "Let It Roll" and "Everytime I See Him".
The first line in the song is also a play on Grinder's Switch, Tennessee, the fictional hometown of Grand Ole Opry star Minnie Pearl. The song uses a clever play on words to promote Southern rock music. The notion that "the South shall rise again" was a familiar sentiment and rallying cry for disaffected Southern whites after the American Civil ...
Most of the tracks on the Easy Rider soundtrack were previously released on other albums by their respective artists. On LP, cassette and reel-to-reel releases of Easy Rider, tracks 1-5 appeared as side 1, and tracks 6-10 as side 2. "The Pusher" – 5:49 Steppenwolf - Steppenwolf (1968) "Born to Be Wild" (Mars Bonfire) – 3:37
Charlie Daniels received five stars out of five from Stephen Thomas Erlewine of Allmusic. [1] Erlewine concludes that "he's [Charlie Daniels] a redneck rebel, not fitting into either the country or the rock & roll of 1970 with his record, but, in retrospect, he sounds like a visionary, pointing the way to the future when southern rockers saw no dividing lines between rock, country, and blues ...