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Contains new tracks as well as re-recordings of "Georgia in a Jug," "She's All I Got," "Song & Dance Man," "Take This Job and Shove It," "Slide Off of Your Satin Sheets," and "Somebody Loves Me." Reissued as The Happy Hour on digital music services. [20] Modern Times: Release date: March 1987 [2] Label: Mercury Records (#830404) Format: LP; 54
Johnny Paycheck (born Donald Eugene Lytle; May 31, 1938 – February 19, 2003) [1] was an American country music singer and Grand Ole Opry member notable for recording the David Allan Coe song "Take This Job and Shove It".
Take This Job and Shove It is the seventeenth album released by country music artist Johnny Paycheck. It was his second album released in 1977 (see 1977 in country music) and is his most commercially successful album, being certified platinum by the RIAA. It contains his most well known song, the David Allan Coe-written title song. It was his ...
"Satin Sheets" is a song written by John Volinkaty, and originally recorded by Bill Anderson and Jan Howard on their March 1972 duet album, Bill & Jan or (Jan & Bill). It was then famously covered by American country music artist Jeanne Pruett in February 1973 as the first single and title track from her album of the same name .
Just one year after Alexander McQueen made fashion history with paint-spraying robots who completed ballet dancer Shalom Harlow’s dress on the runway, the lauded British designer put on a ...
Satin Sheets is a 1973 album by Jeanne Pruett. Satin Sheets may also refer to: "Satin Sheets" (Jeanne Pruett song), the title song on the album "Satin Sheets" (Sharon O'Neill song), 1990 "Satin Sheets" (Silverchair song), 1999 "Satin Sheets" (Willis Alan Ramsey song), 1972
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Satin Sheets' name derived from the album's title track, which was the lead single and only single released from the album. The single released in February 1973, becoming Pruett's first major hit, peaking at number one on the Billboard Magazine Hot Country Singles chart the week of May 23 and number 28 on the Billboard Hot 100 shortly afterward. [5]