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"The Ballad of Boot Hill" was recorded in 1984 by country and western singer Johnny Western which appeared on his 1989 album Gunfight at the O.K. Corral on Bear Family Records. [7] In 2008, Mark van den Berg recorded the song for his collection Mark van den Berg Sings the Hits of Johnny Cash on the Continental Record Services label.
In the video game Fallout: New Vegas, Victor can say, “Next stop, Boot Hill” if provoked. Carl Perkins wrote in 1959 a song "The Ballad of Boot Hill". Johnny Cash recorded it for Columbia Records and it was released in the same year. [7] A Spaghetti Western named Boot Hill was released in 1969 and it featured Terence Hill and Bud Spencer. [8]
Boot Hill was first released in 1969. [6] Wild East Productions released the 92-minute international version on an out-of-print limited edition DVD in 2003. In September 2015, the film was re-released as a double-bill with Django the Bastard from RetroVision Entertainment, LLC. It features both Italian and English audio. [7]
The Irish Rovers performed this song on their 1969 album The Life of the Rover. A version of "The Ballad of Sam Hall" by the actor, Peter Sellers, was recorded at Wilton's Music Hall in East London in 1970. [19] Performed in the epilogue of Masterpiece Theatre season 4, episode 9 (1974): Upstairs, Downstairs II, "Rose's Pigeon".
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This is a list of cover versions by music artists who have recorded one or more songs written and originally recorded by English rock band The Beatles.Many albums have been created in dedication to the group, including film soundtracks, such as I Am Sam (2001) and Across the Universe (2007) and commemorative albums such as Sgt. Pepper Knew My Father (1988) and This Bird Has Flown (2005).
"Die with Your Boots On," a song from Iron Maiden's 1983 album Piece of Mind "Dying with Your Boots On," a song from Scarface's 1993 album The World Is Yours "Die with Your Boots On," a song by Toby Keith "Play a Train Song," a song by Todd Snider, and covered by Robert Earl Keen on his 2011 album Ready For Confetti [3]
In both of those early sources, the song is attributed to Patrick Carpenter, a poet native of Skibbereen. It was published in 1915 by Herbert Hughes who wrote that it had been collected in County Tyrone, and that it was a traditional ballad of the famine. [4] It was recorded by John Lomax from Irish immigrants in Michigan in the 1930s.