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"Mockin' Bird Hill" is a song written in 3/4 time by Calle Jularbo, with lyrics by George Vaughn Horton. It is perhaps best known through recordings by Patti Page , Horton's own Pinetoppers, and the duo of Les Paul and Mary Ford in 1951, or by Donna Fargo 's 1977 version, but many other artists have also recorded the song.
"There'll Never Be Another Night Like This" David Reilly Anthony Bygraves 1980 [87] "There'll Soon Be a Rainbow" Henry Nemo David Saxon 1943 Performed A Cappella with a 10-voice mixed choir [381] "There Never Was a Night So Beautiful" John Rox 1954 with Hugo Winterhalter & his Orchestra [382] "There's a Big Blue Cloud (Next to Heaven)" Ervin Drake
Jon Landau describes the song as "a simple love song" but sees in its "flying" motif a continuation of the theme of escape that runs throughout the Band on the Run album. [9] The singer tells his lover that when he, as a bluebird, kisses her she can also become a bluebird, at which point they become absolutely free.
The chorus references "Faded Love" by Texas musician Bob Wills and "Louisiana Man" by Doug Kershaw repeatedly throughout the song. The song was used as the basis of "If You're Gonna Run in Texas", a radio campaign advertisement produced as part of U.S. Senator Ted Cruz 's reelection campaign in 2018 .
Bob Wills and his Texas Playboys recorded a Western swing cover of Red Wing in the 1940s. George Lewis helped make it a standard of the traditional jazz revival era. An instrumental version, with Chet Atkins on guitar, was released by Asleep at the Wheel in 1993. American roots music group The Steel Wheels recorded a version with new lyrics in ...
Bacon, 65, took his mandolin outside and began to play an acoustic version of “Texas Hold ‘Em,” one of the two country songs Beyoncé, 42, released earlier in the month when announcing ...
"Love Bug", also spelled "Lovebug," is a song by American country music artist George Jones. Jones' version, which also features a young Johnny Paycheck on backup vocals and draws heavily from the Bakersfield sound as popularized by Buck Owens, reached #6 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart in 1965.
They could come in handy, as one Texas family found out earlier this month when they used one to help an orphaned baby bird. Katie Adlong of Amarillo, Texas, found the fuzzy white ball, later ...