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  2. Take These Chains from My Heart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Take_These_Chains_from_My_Heart

    "Take These Chains from My Heart" is a song by Hank Williams. It was written by Fred Rose and Hy Heath and was recorded at Williams' final recording session on September 23, 1952, in Nashville . The song has been widely praised; Williams' biographer Colin Escott deems it "perhaps the best song [Rose] ever presented to Hank...It was one of the ...

  3. Trouble in Mind (George Jones album) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trouble_in_Mind_(George...

    Trouble in Mind is a George Jones album released on the United Artists label in 1966. "Trouble in Mind" and "Worried Mind" had previously been released on the LP George Jones Sings Bob Wills in 1962, while "I Heard You Crying in Your Sleep" and "Take These Chains from My Heart" were included on My Favorites of Hank Williams, also released in 1962.

  4. Big Boss Man (The Kentucky Headhunters album) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Boss_Man_(The_Kentucky...

    Big Boss Man is an album released in 2005 by the Southern American country rock band The Kentucky Headhunters.It is composed of twelve cover songs.The album's singles were "Big Boss Man", "Chug-a-Lug" and "Take These Chains from My Heart", all of which failed to chart.

  5. Lee Roy Parnell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lee_Roy_Parnell

    The album also contained a No. 17-peaking rendition of the Hank Williams song "Take These Chains from My Heart", which Parnell recorded as a duet with Ronnie Dunn of Brooks & Dunn, although Dunn was not credited on the chart. The final single from On the Road, "The Power of Love", peaked at No. 51.

  6. Tommy Edwards - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tommy_Edwards

    The recording "Take These Chains from My Heart" is heard on compact disc in re-channeled stereo because, as with the above song, the original stereo master was lost or destroyed. These recordings were issued on the MGM record label unless otherwise noted. "It's All in the Game" (1958 version) was produced by Harry Myerson.

  7. Fred Rose (songwriter) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fred_Rose_(songwriter)

    Rose died in Nashville from a heart attack in 1954 and was interred there in the Mount Olivet Cemetery. [ 5 ] Along with Hank Williams and the "Father of Country Music", Jimmie Rodgers , Rose was one of the first three inductees of the Country Music Hall of Fame when it opened in 1961.

  8. Kaw-Liga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaw-Liga

    The session also produced "I Could Never Be Ashamed of You," (written for his soon-to-be wife Billie Jean), "Take These Chains From My Heart" (also written by Rose), and Williams' signature ballad "Your Cheatin' Heart." ' More than any other song, "Kaw-Liga" bears evidence of the guiding hand of Rose, who moulded the song into nothing like ...

  9. Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music Volume Two

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_Sounds_in_Country...

    In The Rolling Stone Album Guide (1992), J. D. Considine regarded the second Modern Sounds album as superior to the first, "because its balladry is smoother (as with his version of Williams's 'Your Cheatin' Heart') and because the blues tunes rock harder (check his smouldering rendition of Gibson's 'Don't Tell Me Your Troubles')."