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Lonesome, On'ry and Mean is a studio album by American country music artist Waylon Jennings, released on RCA Victor in 1973. It was, after Good Hearted Woman and Ladies Love Outlaws, the third in a series of albums which were to establish Jennings as one of the most prominent representatives of the outlaw country movement.
The title of the album originated from the song "Ladies Love Outlaws", written by singer-songwriter Lee Clayton. [6] The composition mentions Jennings in one of its stanzas, describing his relation with his wife Jessi Colter: "Jessi liked Cadillacs and diamonds on her hands, Waymore had a reputation as a ladies man/Late one night her light of love finally gave a sign, Jessi parked her Cadillac ...
Chase has released four albums: Another Road in 2002 and I Won't Fall in 2006, the latter producing 2 minor Top 40 hits "I Won't Fall" and "The Rush" on the Canadian Country Music News Charts.
"I Ain't Living Long Like This" is a song written by Rodney Crowell that was first recorded by Gary Stewart on his 1977 album Your Place or Mine (with Rodney Crowell and Nicolette Larson on backing vocals).
Tina Fey’s latest addition to the “Mean Girls” universe has officially hit theaters, and fans are buzzing. ... fan reactions. Becca Wood. Updated March 6, 2024 at 10:34 AM.
Never Could Toe the Mark was released at a pivotal time for Jennings, who was trying to get sober after over twenty years of drug abuse, beginning with amphetamines in the late 1960s and early 1970s and cocaine into the mid-1980s.
In 1969, while staying at the Fort Worther Motel in Fort Worth, Texas, [1] Jennings saw an advertisement in a newspaper promoting Tina Turner as a "good hearted woman loving two-timing men", a reference to Ike Turner. [2]
"The Girl's Gone Wild" is a song recorded by American country music artist Travis Tritt. It was released in May 2004 as the first single from the album My Honky Tonk History.