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Running Down the Road is the second studio album by American folk singer Arlo Guthrie. Guthrie's version of the traditional folk tune " Stealin' " was featured in the film Two-Lane Blacktop . The cover shows the artist upon a Triumph TR6 Trophy motorcycle which is also pictured in the album's 'gate'.
Guthrie was born in the Coney Island neighborhood of Brooklyn, the son of the folk singer and composer Woody Guthrie and dancer Marjorie Mazia Guthrie. [1] He is the fifth, and oldest surviving, of Woody Guthrie's eight children; two older half-sisters died of Huntington's disease (of which Woody also died in 1967), an older half-brother died in a train accident, another half sister died in a ...
Year Title Chart US; 1968 Arlo. Released: Label: Reprise RS-6299; Format: 100 1975 Together in Concert (with Pete Seeger, two-record set) . Released: Label: Reprise 2R-2214; Format: 181
"Motorcycle (Significance of the Pickle) Song" 6:28 – previously on Alice's Restaurant and Arlo "Coming into Los Angeles" 3:03 – previously on Running Down the Road "Last Train" 3:03 – previously on Last of the Brooklyn Cowboys "City of New Orleans" (written by Steve Goodman) 4:31 – previously on Hobo's Lullaby
In a move that signals the continuing ascent of digital creators, popular YouTuber and multiplatform content producer Alan Chikin Chow has opened a new 10,000-square-foot production studio space ...
Arlo Guthrie (1974) Together in Concert ... Review scores; Source Rating; AllMusic [1] Christgau's Record Guide: B+ [2] Arlo Guthrie is the epynomous sixth studio ...
Outlasting the Blues is the tenth studio album by American singer-songwriter Arlo Guthrie, released in June 1979 by Warner Bros. Records (BSK 3336). [1] Produced by John Pilla and recorded from January to March 1979 with Guthrie's touring band Shenandoah, the album consists of songs about mortality, spirituality, love, and the passing of time.
Mystic Journey is an album by the American musician Arlo Guthrie, released in 1996. [2] [3] It was Guthrie's first album of mostly new material in a decade. [4] The album is dedicated to Ma Jaya Sati Bhagavati, Guthrie's Hindu guru. [5]