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"Don't Worry" is a song written and recorded by American country music artist Marty Robbins. It was released in February 1961 as the third single from his compilation album More Greatest Hits . The song was Robbins' seventh number one on the country chart and stayed at number one for ten weeks. [ 1 ]
When Robbins was recording his 1961 hit "Don't Worry" at the Bradley Studios in Nashville, session guitarist Grady Martin accidentally created the electric guitar "fuzz" effect – his six-string bass was run through a faulty channel in the studio's mixing console. Robbins decided to keep it in the final version. [22]
While that was his only pop Number One, in 1957, "A White Sport Coat" charted to #2, and in 1961, "Don't Worry" charted to #3. Since his death in 1982, four posthumous studio albums have been released, although they did not make an impact on the charts.
Pages in category "Songs written by Marty Robbins" The following 17 pages are in this category, out of 17 total. ... Don't Worry (Marty Robbins song) E. El Paso (song)
"Don't Worry" (Appleton song) "Don't Worry" (Marty Robbins song) "Don't Worry" (Madcon song), a 2015 song by Madcon featuring Ray Dalton "Don't Worry" (Ace Wilder song), a 2016 song by Ace Wilder "Don't Worry", a song by The Game featuring Mary J. Blige, from the album The Documentary "Don't Worry", a song by Rebecca St. James from Transform ...
Devil Woman is a song written and recorded by American country music artist Marty Robbins. It was released in June 1962 as the first single and title track from the album Devil Woman . It was also Robbins' seventh single to reach number one on the country chart, spending eight weeks at the top spot. [ 1 ] "
The first known musical recording to use the fuzz bass was Marty Robbins' 1961 song "Don't Worry". Paul McCartney, in one of the earliest uses of the fuzz bass, played the guitar on the 1965 Beatles song "Think for Yourself" from their album Rubber Soul.
It was released in 1960 by Columbia Records as a sequel to Robbins's 1959 hit album Gunfighter Ballads and Trail Songs. In Billboard magazine's annual poll of country music disc jockeys, More Gunfighter Ballads was rated No. 9 among the "Favorite C&W Albums" of 1960. [ 2 ]