enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Bawitdaba - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bawitdaba

    [citation needed] The video depicts Kid Rock and his band performing in a trailer park with numerous children playing football with Joe C. in the background. As the video progresses, it features shots of Kid Rock driving a large Cadillac as he is accompanied by numerous women. The video then cuts to the band performing the song's breakdown in a ...

  3. Kim Mitchell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kim_Mitchell

    Joseph Kim Mitchell (born July 10, 1952) is a Canadian rock musician. He was the lead singer and guitarist for the band Max Webster before going on to a solo career. His 1984 single, "Go for Soda", was his only charted song on the US Billboard Hot 100, reaching number 86. [1]

  4. Trailerhood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trailerhood

    "Trailerhood" is an upbeat song that celebrates the trailer park lifestyle.. In the narrator's view, it's a world filled with pink flamingos and plastic pools (Carl, who lives next door), poker games (Gamblin' James, who will let anyone participate for $15), "music playing up and down the block", auto racing, and Dallas Cowboys football.

  5. Grounds for Divorce (song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grounds_for_Divorce_(song)

    The song opens with the line: I've been working on a cocktail, called grounds for divorce. Uncut magazine said it was "surely one of the best opening lines of any pop song in years" [1] and NME compared it to something James Bond might say "this is kind of glorious one-liner he’d mutter before taking the bad guys down and then smooching a lofty Eastern European countess."

  6. Boogie On Reggae Woman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boogie_On_Reggae_Woman

    "Boogie On Reggae Woman" is a 1974 funk song by American Motown artist Stevie Wonder, released as the second single from his seventeenth studio album, Fulfillingness' First Finale, issued that same year. Despite the song's title, its style is firmly funk/R&B and neither boogie nor reggae.

  7. The Guitar Man - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Guitar_Man

    "The Guitar Man" is a song written by David Gates and originally recorded by the rock group Bread. It first appeared on Bread's 1972 album, Guitar Man . It is a mixture of the sounds of soft rock , including strings and acoustic guitar, and the addition of a wah-wah effect electric guitar, played by Larry Knechtel .

  8. Southern Accents - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_Accents

    "Trailer" was later re-recorded and released in May 2016 by Petty's other band Mudcrutch, on its second studio album, 2. [1] "Walkin' from the Fire" was eventually released on the posthumous box set An American Treasure in 2018. The song "My Life/Your World" from Let Me Up (I've Had Enough) included several of the song's lyrics rewritten.

  9. Dickie Thompson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dickie_Thompson

    Born in Jersey City, New Jersey, he took up the guitar in his teens, playing it left-handed and upside down and pioneering a technique of string bending. By the 1940s, he was well known for his performances in New York City jazz clubs, and started playing as a session musician. [2] He began recording under his own name in the early 1950s.