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"Mountain Music" — a song melding the Southern rock and bluegrass genres — has variously been described by country music writers as "a modern country classic" [3] and a song that "practically defined what country groups have strived to accomplish." [4] According to Randy Owen's book Born Country, "Mountain Music" took him three years to ...
Mountain Music may refer to: Mountain Music (Alabama album), 1982 "Mountain Music" (song), the title track; Mountain Music (Nina Nesbitt album), 2024; Old-time music or "mountain music", a genre of North American folk music; Mountain Music, a 1937 film featuring Arthur Hohl; Mountain Music, a 1975 Claymation short film by Will Vinton
Appalachian music is the music of the region of Appalachia in the Eastern United States.Traditional Appalachian music is derived from various influences, including the ballads, hymns and fiddle music of the British Isles (particularly Scotland), and to a lesser extent the music of Continental Europe.
Mountain Music is the sixth studio album by American country music group Alabama, released in 1982. A crossover success, it ranked well as an album on both country and pop charts and launched singles that were successful in several markets. This is Alabama's most successful studio album.
Impressively, Mountain Man have created a music from another time and place, a closed environment they're now opening up to all. — John Robinson in The Guardian , 2010 [ 17 ] The tunes — despite being originals written in the last two years — sound like they could be early-century hymns, or covers of protofolk tunes gleaned from old ...
"Music Moves Me" Wild Country: 1976 "My Girl" Ronald White Smokey Robinson: Dancin' on the Boulevard: 1997 [8] "My Home's in Alabama" † Randy Owen Teddy Gentry The Alabama Band #3 My Home's in Alabama: 1979 1980 [16] "My Love Belongs to You" Ronnie Rogers: In Pictures: 1995 [29] "My Sweet Country Woman" Wild Country: 1976 "Never Be One" Teddy ...
The Mountain Music Museum (a.k.a. the ACMA Mountain Music Museum) in Kingsport, Tennessee, was a museum dedicated to the history of music that originated primarily in East Tennessee, North Carolina, Southeast Kentucky, Virginia and West Virginia during the 19th century and evolved into what is now generally recognized as bluegrass music and country music.
Mountain was an American hard rock band formed on Long Island, New York, in 1969. [1] [2] Originally consisting of vocalist-guitarist Leslie West, bassist-vocalist Felix Pappalardi, keyboardist Steve Knight, and drummer N. D. Smart (soon replaced by Corky Laing), the group disbanded in 1972, but reunited on several occasions prior to West's death in 2020. [3]