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"Chasin' That Neon Rainbow" is a song written by American country music artist Alan Jackson and Jim McBride, and recorded by Jackson. It was released in September 1990 as the fourth single from Jackson's first album, Here in the Real World .
Eric Church also performed a take on Jackson's 1990 hit "Chasin' That Neon Rainbow." ... Eric Church, Jordan Davis, Vince Gill & Ashley McBryde, Jamey Johnson, Carly Pearce, Lee Ann Womack, among ...
Perhaps this year’s whopper was Eric Church's wildly imaginative interpretation of the Alan Jackson classic “Neon Rainbow.” Granted, Church gave the audience at Nashville’s Ryman ...
This song served as the title track to his debut studio album, Here in the Real World, which also included two more top five hits ("Wanted" and "Chasin' That Neon Rainbow") and his first number one, "I'd Love You All Over Again". [14] Don't Rock the Jukebox was the title of Jackson's second album.
Alan Jackson – lead vocals, backing vocals; Eddie Bayers – drums; Harold Bradley – six-string bass guitar; Jimmy Capps – acoustic guitar; Paul Franklin – steel guitar; Steve Gibson – electric guitar
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Kevin Hughes dreamed differently than most people who came to Nashville. Hughes didn’t try to master guitar or drums. He didn’t envision himself on stage.
The track is featured on The Letter/Neon Rainbow. The song starts with the lyrics "The city lights, the pretty lights, They can warm the coldest nights" and as they suggest, the song is about neon signs that come on at night and make even the city's coldest nights seem warm. The lyrics continue "But in the daytime everything changes, Nothing ...