Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"My Favorite Memory" is a song written and recorded by American country music artist Merle Haggard, his twenty-fifth number-one single. It was released in September 1981 as the first single from the album Big City. The single stayed at number one for one week and spent a total of ten weeks on the country chart.
Many of the songs on Big City explore the struggle of the working man amid the complexities and challenges of urban life and aging. The other single release, “Are the Good Times Really Over (I Wish a Buck Was Still Silver),” peaked at number two on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart and also won the Academy of Country Music 1982 Song ...
If You Want to Be My Woman; Irma Jackson; It's All in the Movies (song) ... My Favorite Memory; My Own Kind of Hat; O. ... (With the Rest of My Life)
Carly Pearce (nominated for New Female Artist of the Year): "My favorite memory is from the 2017 ACM Awards -- my first experience as an artist -- and I was so nervous! Just to be there and walk ...
"My Favorite Memory" 1 3 Big City: 1982 "Big City" 1 1 "Dealing with the Devil" (live) 49 — Rainbow Stew "Are the Good Times Really Over (I Wish a Buck Was Still Silver)" 2 1 Big City "Going Where the Lonely Go" 1 1 Going Where the Lonely Go: 1983 "You Take Me for Granted" 1 9 "What Am I Gonna Do (With the Rest of My Life)" 3 2 That's the Way ...
Upon its original release in 1967, the song had been a minor hit on Billboard 's all-genres chart, the Hot 100. More than three years after his death, however, the song was re-released to promote a similarly titled album which combined existing Presley vocals with new instrumental backing tracks created in Nashville by producer Felton Jarvis ...
The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City star, 51, who is celebrating her anniversary with husband Robert Cosby Sr. on Sept. 28, is sharing some of her favorite moments from the couple's special day.
Although it is often assumed that Haggard, who was enjoying enormous success with the social commentary "Okie from Muskogee" and the politically charged "The Fightin' Side of Me" in 1969 and 1970, sought to distance himself from controversy by returning to his musical roots by recording a tribute to his childhood idol Bob Wills, this is not quite accurate; according to David Cantwell's book ...