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"Cocaine Blues" is a Western swing ... Stefan Grossman (1978, on Acoustic Guitar), Townes ... (again often known as "Cocaine Blues") shares chords and many rhyming ...
The song "Brownskin Blues" is also stylistically akin to much of Jordan's work but stands on its own as a Justice original. [ 6 ] Justice is musically related to Frank Hutchison (with whom he played music and worked as a coal miner in Logan County, West Virginia ), [ 7 ] Bayless Rose and The Williamson Brothers .
Woody Guthrie Muleskinner Blues: The Asch Recordings, Smithsonian Folkways Recordings SFW 40101 (1997) The White Stripes Under Blackpool Lights (2004) Old Crow Medicine Show: Two versions: As "Tell It to Me" on Old Crow Medicine Show (2004) and with substantially reworked lyrics as "Cocaine Habit" on Big Iron World (2006)
1948 Cocaine Blues - Roy Hogsed, US Country #15. Music/lyrics attributed to T. J. 'Red' Arnall; 1940s Chain Gang Blues - Riley Puckett; 1940s Bad Lee Brown - Woody Guthrie and Cisco Houston; 1959 Badman Ballad - Cisco Houston The Cisco Special! album; 1960 Transfusion Blues - Johnny Cash Now, There Was A Song album, and on 1968 album At Folsom ...
Although he was active in the music business for only seven years, "Cocaine Blues" has been widely covered. [2] Roy Hogsed was the first artist to record the Rockabilly song Gonna Get Along Without You Now made famous by Teresa Brewer (1952), Patience and Prudence (1956), Skeeter Davis (1964), Trini Lopez (1967) and Viola Wills (1979).
The current opening sentence ""Cocaine Blues" is a Western Swing song written by T. J. "Red" Arnall ..." is just wrong. At least in my circles (Canadian who was young in the 60s) the Gary Davis version and its descendants are "Cocaine Blues" and Arnall's version is at best a footnote. Pashley 21:11, 14 April 2016 (UTC)
"Snortin' Whiskey" (also sometimes referred to as "Snortin' Whiskey, Drinkin' Cocaine") is a blues rock [1] song written by Pat Travers and Pat Thrall. It was originally recorded by the Pat Travers Band and released on the album Crash and Burn in 1980 on the Polydor label and also as a US single the same year.
"Cocaine" is a song written and recorded in 1976 by singer-songwriter J. J. Cale. The song was popularized by Eric Clapton after his version was released on the 1977 album Slowhand. J. J. Cale's version of "Cocaine" was a number-one hit in New Zealand for a single week and became the seventh-best-selling single of 1977. Personnel