来自:Buck Owens by Stephen Thomas ErlewineHarlan Howard wrote many of Buck Owens' biggest hits and best songs, including "I've Got A Tiger By the Tail," "Above and Beyond," "Excuse Me (I Think I've Got A Heartache)," and "Under the Influence of Love," so it's only natural that...
Buck Owens; together, they had a son, Buddy. Buck and his young family moved to Bakersfield, California, in the early 1950s, where he worked as a session guitarist and played for a band called the Orange Blossom Playboys. After a few years of recording rockabilly songs (as "Corky Jones...
His stoicism falls away when he talks about new music: songs still hit this man with the force of a truck. When Adkins first heard the demo for his latest single, “Watered Down,” he recalls feeling like “it nailed me right between the eyes.” While recording “Whippoorwills and Freigh...
Owens made a side trip to Capitol and asked Ken Nelson if he could record his next session with fiddle and steel. On October 9, 1958, he cut four original songs, including the ballad "Second Fiddle," in the "shuffle" style popularized by Ray Price in songs like "Crazy Arms." By the...
Stipe compared the song’s theme toEvery Breath You TakebyThe Police, saying, “It’s just a classic obsession pop song. I’ve always felt the best kinds of songs are the ones where anybody can listen to it, put themselves in it and say, ‘Yeah, that’s me.'” ...
Buck Owens - Act Naturally 专辑: Best Road Trip Songs & Tunes Collection - 4 Vol 200 Successes 1956-1962 (Vol. 4 : 50 Titles - Country) 歌手:Buck OwensBuck Owens, The Buckaroos - Act Naturally They're gonna put me in the movies They're gonna make a big star out of me We...
The Buckaroos – all the while churning out hit after hit. They made some of the greatest country music in this world or the next. Today, we’ve already learned some things that shed new light on what we thought we knew. So what else don’t we know about Don Rich and Buck Owens?
onstage once before. As a young devotee of the leaner, more traditional country sound, Yoakam was on his way up in 1987 when he showed up at the door of Buck Owens’ Enterprises. He was playing the Kern County Fair, and could Buck step up onstage and play a couple of songs with ...
Overall, Buck was a bit surprised by the success of the album, which included the hit singles “Man on the Moon” and “Everybody Hurts.”“My feeling was — not in a negative way — is that it was kind of a down record with a lot of minor keys, and we were at...
Buck Owens; together, they had a son, Buddy. Buck and his young family moved to Bakersfield, California, in the early 1950s, where he worked as a session guitarist and played for a band called the Orange Blossom Playboys. After a few years of recording rockabilly songs (as "Corky Jones...