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The song is named after American country singer Emmylou Harris and discusses her relationship with her musical partner Gram Parsons and compares it to the relationship between Johnny and June Carter Cash. When discussing the writing of the song, the band explained "when we were 14 and 16, we discovered the music of Emmylou Harris and Gram Parsons.
Mark Knopfler and Emmylou Harris have had long histories of collaborating with and supporting other artists. In addition to 23 solo albums and two successful collaborative albums with Dolly Parton and Linda Ronstadt, Harris has recorded backing and duet vocals with many of the significant recording artists of her generation, including The Band, John Denver, Bob Dylan, Gram Parsons, Townes Van ...
"All the Roadrunning" is a song written and performed by Mark Knopfler featuring American country singer Emmylou Harris. It was first released as a new track on Knopfler's career-spanning compilation Private Investigations [2] and as a CD single in 2005. [3] In April 2006, the song was also released on the album of the same title. [4]
The album tells the story of a character named Sally Rose, a singer whose lover and mentor, a hard-living, hard-drinking musician, is killed while on the road. [1] Dolly Parton, Linda Ronstadt and Gail Davies sing harmony on several of the songs. Many of the songs flow into one another to create a continuous momentum.
"Peter's Song" (music & lyrics by Rodger Strader) – Peter § Crucifixion Medley: "Let Him Be Crucified" (music & lyrics by Clydesdale) – Pilate, Chorus "Spiel Mit Mir" (music & lyrics by Till Lindemann) – Grandpa, Chorus "Cross of Calvary" (music by Don and Lorie Marsh, lyrics by Cloninger, arr. by Rhodes) – Mary at the Cross, John, Chorus
"Boulder to Birmingham" is a song written by Emmylou Harris and Bill Danoff which first appeared on Harris's 1975 album Pieces of the Sky. It has served as something of a signature tune for the artist and recounts her feelings of grief in the years following the death of country rock star and mentor Gram Parsons.
Cowgirl's Prayer is the seventeenth studio album by American country artist Emmylou Harris, released on September 28, 1993, by Warner Bros. Records.Coming immediately after 1992's live acoustic At the Ryman album, Cowgirl's Prayer is a collection of similarly subdued material (with a couple of rockers thrown in, notably "High Powered Love", the album's first single).
Charles Ernest Moody (a.k.a. Charbles Earnest Moody) was a gospel [1] songwriter from Gordon County, Georgia, United States.He was a member of the 1920s string band Georgia Yellow Hammers [2] from Calhoun, Georgia, which included members Bill Chitwood, Bud Landress, and Phil Reeve. [3]