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H. Half of Me (Thomas Rhett and Riley Green song) Hands of Death (Burn Baby Burn) ¡Happy Birthday Guadalupe! Happy Thoughts (song) Hell Right; Hey Oh
The album consists of duets between Lewis and some of the biggest names in both rock and country music, past and present. The title derives from the generation of 1950s Sun Studios recording artists such as Johnny Cash, Roy Orbison, Charlie Rich, Carl Perkins, and Elvis Presley; all of whom had died, leaving Lewis the "last man standing". Lewis ...
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That's right, Kelly and Jimmy tackled a pretty extensive history of pop duets during their little number, including Elton John and Kiki Dee, Sonny and Cher and even Paula Abdul and MC Skat Kat.
The duo went on to record two new albums also, one in 1989 simply called Peters and Lee and the last in 1992 for their 21st anniversary, before Peters' death from bone cancer that same year, aged 60. Their final television appearance was Pebble Mill in February 1992 with a short interview and a performance of the hit "Hey Mister Music Man ...
This is the second album featuring duets with Prine. His first album of duets was released in 1999 with the similarly styled In Spite of Ourselves. [7] [8] [9]The 15 tracks include 14 duets and feature 11 female artists, (with Iris DeMent, Lee Ann Womack and Kathy Mattea recording two duets each and Alison Krauss, Susan Tedeschi, Holly Williams, Morgane Stapleton, Amanda Shires, Miranda ...
The album consisted of 10 duets performed by Lee Greenwood and Barbara Mandrell. The album's fifth track, "We Were Meant for Each Other" was written by Greenwood and also served as the album's title track. The opening track, "To Me" was co-written by Mike Reid, who also was a National Football League player in the early 1970s.
Full of whimsical, often violent contrasts in color and dynamics, Blake's playing was an eccentric, fractured collage of twentieth-century modernism, Thelonious Monk, gospel, and film music. His spiky, unresolved style found a perfect foil in the serenity and poise of Lee's singing and in her precise, sensuous diction."