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Gene Watson is an American country music artist. His discography consists of 33 studio albums, eight compilation albums, 61 singles, and five music videos. Of his singles, 48 charted on the U.S. Billboard Hot Country Songs charts between 1975 and 1997, including the 1982 number one single "Fourteen Carat Mind".
Gene Watson, September 2016, Ruidoso, New Mexico, OnstageMagazineGroup Gary Gene Watson (born October 11, 1943) [ 1 ] is an American country music singer. He is most famous for his 1975 hit " Love in the Hot Afternoon ," his 1981 No. 1 hit " Fourteen Carat Mind ," and his signature 1979 song " Farewell Party ."
"Got No Reason Now for Goin' Home" is a song written by Johnny Russell, and recorded by American country music artist Gene Watson. It was released in October 1984 as the first single from the album Heartaches and Love and Stuff. The song reached #7 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart. [1]
"Farewell Party" is a song written by Lawton Williams. Lawton also had the original recording in 1960. Little Jimmy Dickens recorded the song in 1961. It was also recorded by American country music artists Johnny Bush and Waylon Jennings, as well as Gene Watson.
In the fall of 2012 Ford announced he would be touring with JJ Lawhorn on the Answer To No One Tour. Colt Ford's fifth studio album, Thanks for Listening , was released on July 1, 2014. "4 Lane Gone" is the first single from his sixth studio album, Love Hope Faith .
Carson's song "There Ain't No Bugs on Me" mocked the theory of evolution, stating "there may be monkey in some of you guys, but there ain't no monkey in me". In the same song, he referenced the Ku Klux Klan ("my old man joined the Ku Klux, and ma, she lost her sheet"), whose rallies he regularly attended.
Rickey Gene Wright is an Americana Singer Songwriter who wrote the song "Frank And Jesse James" in 1982 while he was one of the weekly performers at the Mesquite Opry. This song tells of the effect the American Civil War had on the James Brothers and the reason why they became outlaws, "It was all the same to Frank and Jesse James".
The song is based on Jennings's own longstanding drug habit, which culminated in a 1977 arrest on federal drug charges in which a package from New York City was traced to a studio in Nashville, Tennessee where Waylon was recording.