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Flamingo" (1940) is a popular song and jazz standard written by Ted Grouya with lyrics by Edmund Anderson and first recorded by singer Herb Jeffries and the Duke Ellington Orchestra on December 28, 1940, for Victor Records (catalog No. 27326B). [1]
Hank Flamingo was an American country music band founded in the late 1980s. Its membership comprised Trent Summar ( lead vocals ), Philip Wallace ( guitar ), Eddie Grigg (guitar, vocals), Ben Northern ( bass guitar , vocals), Stuart E. Stuart ( fiddle , vocals), and Roy Watts ( drums ). [ 1 ]
The album was long-awaited by fans of Stuart, as most of the songs had already featured on The Marty Stuart Show, Stuart's country/bluegrass show on RFD-TV. It was recorded in the historic RCA Studio B in Nashville , which was being used by the Country Music Hall of Fame as a type of museum until Stuart asked to use the "Home of a Thousand Hits ...
Radio Free Albemuth is the debut solo album by bassist Stuart Hamm, released in 1988 on Relativity Records. Hamm is backed up by guitarists Allan Holdsworth and Joe Satriani . The title of the album and many of the songs were inspired by the novels of Philip K. Dick .
"This One's Gonna Hurt You (For a Long, Long Time)" is a song written by American country music artist Marty Stuart, who recorded the song as a duet with Travis Tritt. It was released in June 1992 as the first single from Stuart's album This One's Gonna Hurt You. It peaked at #7 in the United States, [1] and #6 Canada.
"Only the Young" is the second solo single by American singer-songwriter and The Killers frontman, Brandon Flowers, from his debut studio album Flamingo. The song was written by Flowers and produced by Stuart Price.
Busy Bee Cafe is the second solo album of American country singer Marty Stuart. Unlike his debut solo album, this project contains original material by Stuart, including the title track, 'Boogie For Clarence' and 'Long Train Gone'.
"Now That's Country" is a song written and recorded by American country music artist Marty Stuart. It was released in September 1992 as the second single from the album This One's Gonna Hurt You. The song reached #18 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart. [1]