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"Hot 'Lanta" is an instrumental piece performed by the Allman Brothers Band. It debuted on their live album At Fillmore East , released in July 1971, the fifth track on the album. "Hotlanta" is a controversial nickname for Atlanta , Georgia, and is a portmanteau of the words "hot" and "Atlanta".
"Atlanta, G.A.", pop/big band song written by Sunny Skylar and Artie Shaftel 1945 "Atlanta Blues (Make Me One Pallet On Your Floor)" by Eartha Kitt from "St. Louis Blues" 1958 [1] "Hot 'Lanta" (instrumental) by The Allman Brothers Band, from At Fillmore East 1971 [2] “Atlanta” by Tony Orlando and Dawn, 1973 [1]
Music Box is the third studio album by American singer-songwriter Mariah Carey.It was released by Columbia Records on August 31, 1993. The album comprises ballads primarily written by Carey and Walter Afanasieff, with whom she had previously worked on Emotions (1991), and a few urban dance tracks.
Sea Level was an American rock band from Macon, Georgia.Formed in 1976, the band was an offshoot of the Allman Brothers Band.Between 1977 and 1980, the band released five studio albums which incorporated elements of funk, blues and Latin music.
The song was composed by Jam, Lewis, Michael Bivins, Ronnie DeVoe, Harry Wayne Casey and Richard Finch. The song was released as the soundtrack's lead single on May 12, 1992, by Perspective Records and A&M Records. Additionally, the song was remixed by David Morales, Frankie Knuckles, and CJ Mackintosh. The duet became a major hit in several ...
This recording features the original lineup of the Allman Brothers Band. Saxophonist Rudolph "Juicy" Carter sits in on six of the nine songs. The album includes a bonus track with a 13-minute interview of Berry Oakley and Duane Allman for a radio station in Houston from June 6, 1971, about three months before the concert was recorded. [1]
He wrote the song "Jessica", inspired by his young daughter Jessica, [7] and the Allmans' highest-charting single, "Ramblin' Man", [8] for the band's 1973 breakout commercial success Brothers and Sisters. Betts in 1974. Betts's first solo album, Highway Call, was released in 1974 and featured fiddle player Vassar Clements. [9]
The song reached No. 7 on the U.S. mainstream rock chart in 1994. [3] The song appeared on their 1994 album, Where It All Begins, [4] and on the soundtrack to the 1994 film The Cowboy Way. The song features the Bo Diddley beat. [5] The song was featured in an episode of the TV show King of the Hill.