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"Six Days on the Road" is an American song written by Earl Green and Muscle Shoals Sound Studio songwriter Carl Montgomery, made famous by country music singer Dave Dudley. The song was initially recorded by Paul Davis (not the same as the better known singer-songwriter, full name Paul Lavon Davis ) and released in 1961 on the Bulletin label.
Dave Dudley Sings Six Days on the Road: 16 Golden Wing 1964 Songs About the Working Man: 19 Mercury Travelin' with Dave Dudley: 8 Talk of the Town: 16 1965 Rural Route No. 1 — Truck Drivin' Son-of-a-Gun: 3 Greatest Hits — 1966 There's a Star-Spangled Banner Waving Somewhere: 12 Lonelyville: 6 Free and Easy: 10 1967 My Kind of Love — Dave ...
Six Days on the Road is the twelfth studio album by American country music band Sawyer Brown. It was released in 1997 on Curb Records. Its title track and lead-off single is a cover of the Dave Dudley hit from 1963. This cover reached number 13 on the Billboard country charts.
This summer, I traveled from the UK to spend 10 days road-tripping around Utah and Arizona. Driving abroad always gets my nerves going, so renting a car alone in the US was a big step for me.
"Six Days on the Road" (Carl Montgomery, Earl Green) "Farther on Down the Road (You Will Accompany Me)" (Taj Mahal, Jesse Ed Davis, Gary Gilmore, Chuck Blackwell) "Keep Your Hands Off Her" (Huddie Ledbetter) "Bacon Fat" (Robbie Robertson, Garth Hudson) De Ole Folks at Home "Linin' Track" (Huddie Ledbetter)
Eight Days to Live is a 2006 television film produced by CTV about a mother who organizes a search and rescue for her son who drives off the road in the Lytton area of the Fraser Canyon of British Columbia. It is based on the true story of nineteen year old Joe Spring who spent eight days trapped inside his red sports car.
"'Six Days" is a song by American trip-hop artist DJ Shadow, from his second album, The Private Press. The song was written by Brian Farrell and Dennis Olivieri, and was produced by DJ Shadow. It was released as the third official single from the album in 2002.
In the Netflix short documentary "The Dads," six fathers find common ground on their unconditional love for their gay and transgender children.