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"The Ballad of Boot Hill" was recorded in 1984 by country and western singer Johnny Western which appeared on his 1989 album Gunfight at the O.K. Corral on Bear Family Records. [7] In 2008, Mark van den Berg recorded the song for his collection Mark van den Berg Sings the Hits of Johnny Cash on the Continental Record Services label.
In the video game Fallout: New Vegas, Victor can say, “Next stop, Boot Hill” if provoked. Carl Perkins wrote in 1959 a song "The Ballad of Boot Hill". Johnny Cash recorded it for Columbia Records and it was released in the same year. [7] A Spaghetti Western named Boot Hill was released in 1969 and it featured Terence Hill and Bud Spencer. [8]
The first section, "Whisky Boot Hill," was based on a song that Young had originally started working on in 1967 and had released a string quartet arrangement of on his solo debut album Neil Young. [2] The second section, "Down Down Down," was from a song that Young had recorded with Buffalo Springfield which had not yet been released.
Boot Hill, a western starring Terence Hill; Boot Hill (role-playing game), a role-playing game from TSR, Inc. Boot Hill Bowl, a now defunct post-season college football game played in Dodge City, Kansas "Boot Hill", a song performed by artists such as Johnny Winter and Stevie Ray Vaughan; Boot Hill, a mountain in Mare Tranquillitatis on the moon
Boot Hill (Italian: La collina degli stivali) is a 1969 Spaghetti Western film starring Terence Hill and Bud Spencer. Boot Hill was the last film in a trilogy that started with God Forgives... I Don't! (1967), followed by Ace High (1968). [4] The film was re-released as Trinity Rides Again. [5]
Showdown at Boot Hill is a 1958 American Western film directed by Gene Fowler Jr., written by Louis Vittes, and starring Charles Bronson, Robert Hutton, John Carradine, Carole Mathews, Fintan Meyler and Paul Maxey.
The Boothill Foot Tappers was a British folk/skiffle/bluegrass band that was formed in 1982 and associated with the folk music revival in the United Kingdom. [1]They were featured in the Ben Elton-presented show South of Watford on London Weekend Television in 1984, as part of the emerging British roots movement based in London, along with other acts including the Pogues.
They settled on the Boot Hill farm in Clark County, Kentucky, with two sons, Thomas Michael Tolliver and John Edward, where they spent the rest of their lives. Niles died in Lexington, Kentucky on March 1, 1980, at age 87.