“Jimmy [sic] Rodgers seems to be going over big now with his vocal and guitar records. They are reminiscent of Kentucky and Tennessee mountain folk songs.” The writer couldn’t have been more ...
In May a columnist for a newspaper in Wichita, Kansas, commented: “Jimmy [sic] Rodgers seems to be going over big now with his vocal and guitar records. They are reminiscent of Kentucky and Tennessee ...
and Jimmie Rodgers’ ‘Waiting For A Train’. George Gershwin’s ‘An American In Paris’ is also listed, as is Jack Yellen and Milton Ager’s ‘Happy Days Are Here Again’, Alfred Dubin ...
Jimmy Page dug up several unheard gems for his deluxe Led Zeppelin reissues. But there's one song that still remains ...
Both the song and the film are now in the public ... Cole Porter’s “What Is This Thing Called Love?,” and Jimmie Rodgers’ “Waiting For A Train.” To clarify: Those actual compositions ...
There are also songs co-written with Burnett ... the Carter Family and Jimmie Rodgers as if they’d written them the week before—and they sang their originals if they’d cribbed them from ...
These country songs idealized the so-called good ol ... collaborations between white and Black musicians, such as Jimmie Rodgers, the "Father of Country Music," and jazz legend Louis Armstrong ...
Yarrow, who also co-wrote the group’s most enduring song, “Puff the Magic Dragon,” died Tuesday ... was pardoned by President Jimmy Carter in 1981. Over the decades, he apologized repeatedly. “I fully ...
One of the most beloved versions of the song was sung by Jimmy Durante ... and silver-white winters in the composed by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II for The Sound of Music.
“When I first met Jimmy, the first thing he did was quote my songs back to me,” Dylan would recall ... and earned the admiration of the likes of Paul Simon, Johnny Cash, Nile Rodgers, Bono, and more.
Jimmy Barnes, one of Australia’s most iconic rock musicians ... She appeared in the 2008 music video short for Liam Finn’s song Better to Be and has also sung alongside her father at live performances ...
Paul Rodgers ... off playing Jimmy Page-inspired blues riffs, used a PRS Singlecut guitar for the distinctive distortion tone sound on the smash hit “Tom Sawyer,” a song from the Moving ...