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"Phantom 309" is a song written by Tommy Faile and released as a single by Red Sovine in 1967. It was a minor hit, peaking at number nine on the Billboard Magazine Country chart. The lyrics are spoken, rather than sung.
Phantom 309: 18 — — Starday Tell Maude I Slipped — — — Sunday with Sovine — — — Anytime — — — 1969 Classic Narrations — — — Closing Time Till Dawn — — — Who Am I — — — Ruby Don't Take Your Love to Town — — — 1970 I Know You're Married — — — 1973 Greatest Grand Ole Opry — — — Chart 1974 ...
Phantom 309 is an album by country music singer Woodrow Wilson Sovine, better known as Red Sovine, released by Starday Records in 1967 and re-released by Power Pak Records (the budget division of Gusto Records) in 1975 with the same track listing and album art. [1] There was also a compilation CD of the same name issued by Prism Leisure in 2001.
[31] [32] He also began to sing at the Heritage; his set initially consisted largely of covers of Dylan and Red Sovine's "Phantom 309". [33] In time, he performed his own material as well, often parodies of country songs or bittersweet ballads influenced by his relationships; these included early songs " Ol' 55 " and "I Hope That I Don't Fall ...
Phantom 309; R. Roses for Mama (song) T. Teddy Bear (Red Sovine song) W. Why Baby Why This page was last edited on 5 October 2010, at 04:14 (UTC) ...
Phantom 309; T. Teddy Bear (Red Sovine song) There Goes My Everything (song) W. Wings of a Dove (Bob Ferguson song)
"Phantom 309" Red Sovine: 1964: The song's protagonist, a hitchhiker, meets the ghost of a truck driver who was killed when he swerved his semi-trailer truck into a ditch to avert a potentially deadly collision with a bus full of teenagers. "Plastic Flowers on the Highway" Drive-By Truckers: 2001 "Push Back The Hands" They Might Be Giants: 2018 ...
Tommy Faile (September 15, 1928 – August 2, 1998) was an American songwriter and singer best known for composing "Phantom 309", singing "The Legend of the Brown Mountain Lights", his deep voice and comic onstage banter.