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Tom Rush is the 1970 album from pioneer Folk rock musician Tom Rush. He covers songs from fellow folkies Jackson Browne, Murray McLauchlan, James Taylor and David Wiffen. Guest musicians were David Bromberg on Dobro and Red Rhodes on Steel Guitar. The album spent sixteen weeks on the Billboard 200, peaking at #76 on May 23, 1970. [3]
The songs follow the cycle of a relationship from its beginning to an end, according to the lyric content and sequencing of songs. Joni Mitchell's "The Circle Game", recorded prior to her own more upbeat release of the song on her 1970 album Ladies of the Canyon, can be read as the turning point of the relationship while "Rockport Sunday" ends the romance using an instrumental piece, followed ...
Thomas Walker Rush (born February 8, 1941) [1] is an American folk and blues singer, guitarist, and songwriter whose success helped launch the careers of other singer-songwriters in the 1960s and who has continued his own singing career for 60 years.
"Kids These Days" (Tom Rush, Trevor Veitch) – 4:10 "Mink Julip" (Tom Rush) – 2:25 "Mother Earth" – 2:36 "Jamaica, Say You Will" (Jackson Browne) – 4:11 "Merrimack County II" (Tom Rush, Trevor Veitch) – 2:46 "Gypsy Boy" (Bob Carpenter) – 3:20 "Wind on the Water" (Tom Rush) – 3:34 "Roll Away the Grey" (Bob Carpenter) – 2:59
For Everyman marked the debut of multi-instrumentalist David Lindley's long association with Browne. Guest artists included David Crosby (harmony on the title track), Glenn Frey (harmony on "Redneck Friend"), Elton John (credited as Rockaday Johnnie, piano on "Redneck Friend"), [2] Don Henley (harmony on "Colors of the Sun"), Joni Mitchell, and Bonnie Raitt.
"No Regrets" was a major hit spending twelve weeks on the UK Singles Chart and peaking at #7 in February 1976 [4] giving Rush belated Top Ten exposure as a songwriter in the UK. The single would prove to be the group's final taste of commercial success while together, as the parent album and subsequent Walker Brothers releases failed to find a ...
Wrong End of the Rainbow is the 1970 album from pioneer Folk rock musician Tom Rush. The music on this album, his second in 1970, tends to lean more toward the country rock style. [ 1 ] The album was on the Billboard 200 chart for nine weeks and charted as high as #110 on January 30, 1971.
The album received spotty promotion, and the song was not widely known until it appeared on Tom Rush's self-titled album in 1970. [2] [1] Soon after it was recorded by Whitney Sunday. [3] "Driving Wheel" was included on Roger McGuinn's self-titled 1973 album, released by Columbia Records. [4]