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Cajun Baby (lyrics by Williams; music composed by Hank Williams, Jr.) Cajun Baby Blues (co-written with Jimmy Fields) California Zephyr; Calling You; Coeur Brise (co-written with William Lamothe) Cold, Cold Heart; Come a Runnin' (co-written with Jimmy Fields) Countryfied; Cowboys Don't Cry (lyrics by Williams, music composed by Mickey Newbury)
Hank Williams / Hank Williams Jr. Again (with Hank Williams, Jr.) Release date: 1967; Label: MGM Records; 38 — — The Legend of Hank Williams in Song and Story (with Hank Williams, Jr.) Release date: 1973; Label: MGM Records; 17 — — The Best of Hank & Hank (with Hank Williams, Jr.) Release date: 1992; Label: Curb Records; 44 179 26 Three ...
Hank Live is a live album by American musician Hank Williams Jr. It was released by Warner Bros. Records in January 1987. The album reached No. 1 on the Top Country Albums chart [ 2 ] and has been certified Platinum by the RIAA .
This list contains cover songs recorded by American singer-songwriter Hank Williams and the composer(s). The songs are arranged alphabetically. The songs are arranged alphabetically. Contents:
The LP contains two indisputable Hank Williams classics: the album opener "Lost Highway," which was composed by blind Texas honky tonk singer and songwriter Leon Payne, and the gospel standard "I Saw the Light," which Williams usually sang to close his shows. Five of the album's eight tracks were composed by Williams, with the only legitimate ...
The Complete Hank Williams is a 1998 box set collecting almost all of the recorded works of country music legend Hank Williams, from his first recorded track in 1947 to the last session prior to his untimely death in 1953 at the age of 29. [2]
Academy of Country Music: with Hank Williams Jr. [199] 1990: Vocal Collaboration of the Year ("There's a Tear in My Beer") TNN/Music City News: with Hank Williams Jr. [200] 1990: Video of the Year ("There's a Tear in My Beer") TNN/Music City News: with Hank Williams Jr. 2010: Special Awards and Citation for his pivotal role in transforming ...
The song became a standard for both the country music and gospel music genres, and has been covered by several artists of the two genres and beyond. Allmusic called it one of Williams' "finest songs concerning his strong religious conviction". [18] It was ranked first in Country Music Television's 20 Greatest Songs of Faith in 2005. [19]