Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Roll On (Eighteen Wheeler)" is a song written by Dave Loggins, and recorded by American country music band Alabama. It was released in January 1984 as the first single and title track to the band's album Roll On. It was the group's 12th straight No. 1 single on the Billboard magazine Hot Country Singles chart. [2]
Roll On is the eighth studio album by American country music band Alabama, released in January 1984.. All four singles released from this album reached Number One on the Hot Country Singles chart: "Roll On (Eighteen Wheeler)", "When We Make Love", "If You're Gonna Play in Texas (You Gotta Have a Fiddle in the Band)" and "(There's A) Fire in the Night".
"Roll On, Columbia, Roll On" is an American folk song written in 1941 by American folk singer Woody Guthrie, [1] who popularized the song through his own recording of it. The song glamorized the harnessing of the Columbia River in the Pacific Northwest .
"Roll On" is the fourth single from Kid Rock's triple-platinum album Rock n Roll Jesus. It was shipped to radio on September 23, 2008. The song failed to chart in the United States. In Germany it peaked at No. 59. The video of the song was very successful on the VH1 weekly Top 20 countdown, peaking at No. 4.
Roll On is the fourteenth studio album by American singer-songwriter J. J. Cale (and the final one to be released in his lifetime), released on February 24, 2009, through Rounder Records. [3]
Spectrum Culture included "Roll On John" on a list of "Bob Dylan's 20 Best Songs of the '10s and Beyond". In an article accompanying the list, critic David Harris claims that "Dylan looks at Lennon as myth more than man", noting how "the song veers wildly into an exploration of slavery, Jesus and William Blake" but that "there is something entrancing about Dylan’s meanderings, especially ...
A 6-year-old girl got the surprise of a lifetime when, after she went viral singing a song by Jelly Roll, the country music superstar responded. Now, she says she hopes to meet him — and sing ...
The documentary never came to fruition, but 17 of the 26 songs he wrote during this period were compiled and released as this collection, including some of his most famous songs, such as "Roll on Columbia", "Grand Coulee Dam", "Hard Travelin’," and "Pastures of Plenty." [3]