| | Merle Haggard All Night Long CD Merle Haggard Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
With his late-1970s album ALL NIGHT LONG Merle Haggard returned to his honky-tonk barroom roots in a collection of uptempo songs performed with a smoking, stripped down band. Sung with then up-and-coming singer Randy Travis, the title track is a fiddle- and pedal steel-laced homage to the king of Western swing, Bob Wills, while "The Farmer's Daughter" is a traditional tearjerker, "A Bar in Bakersfield" is a semi-autobiographical honky-tonk special, and Haggard just wouldn't be Haggard without courting some controversy with the unapologetically redneck "I'm a White Boy."
Live Recording
Personnel includes: Merle Haggard (vocals, guitar); Randy Travis (vocals).
Merle Haggard All Night Long Songs All Night Long Music Review Purchase All Night Long CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Merle Haggard Blue Jungle CD (1990)
All Night Long album
$6.79
| | Waylon Jennings Ramblin' Man CD (1974)
All Night Long CD music
$7.69 Digitally remastered by Elliott Federman (SAJE Sound, New York, New York).
RAMBLIN' MAN is a product of the most creatively fertile period in Waylon Jennings' career. In the mid-'70s, Jennings' outlaw stance was still fresh and challenging, and the records he made with his Waylors were imbued with the same energy the group put into its countless performances of the period.
Jennings' rock-friendly aesthetic is advanced here by a version of the Allman Brothers' "Midnight ...
| | Merle Haggard Serving 190 Proof CD (1979)
All Night Long music CDs
$5.19
| | Outlaws (1st LP) CD (1975) Remastered
All Night Long songs
$7.59 Digitally remastered by Elliott Federman (SAJE Sound, New York, New ...
| | Merle Haggard Rainbow Stew: Live At Anaheim Stadium CD (1981)
All Night Long album
$5.59
| | Merle Haggard Strangers/Swinging Doors And The Bottle Let Me Down CD (2006)
All Night Long CD music
$11.75
| | Kasey Chambers Captain CD (2000)
All Night Long music CDs
$9.59 In "Southern Kind of Life," a song on her debut album, The Captain, Kasey Chambers convincingly describes a rural Southern upbringing -- poverty stricken and Bible dominated -- and since she performs in a style associated with the Appalachians as developed into commercial country music, it's easy to assume she's singing about the American South. But she isn't; she's singing about the Nullarbor Plain in south-central Australia, where she grew up, apparently listening to a lot of country records. The result is a style that will remind some listeners of Dolly Parton and others of Lucinda Williams, as Chambers, backed ...
| | New Riders Of The Purple Sage CD (1971) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
All Night Long songs
$7.49 New Riders of the Purple Sage: Dave Torbert (bass instrument, background vocals); David Nelson, John Dawson.
In the early 1970s, with the likes of the Band, the Grateful Dead, and Crosby, Stills & Nash all turning away from the orgy of the senses that was the '60s, toward a simpler, more deeply rooted place, country rock became de rigeur. Shortly after the Dead made their move from acid tests to hoedowns, their pals Dave Torbert and John "Marmaduke" Dawson followed suit. Torbert and Dawson were the heart of New Riders of the Purple Sage, aided on their debut album by Dead buddies Jerry Garcia and Mickey Hart. There's a still-slightly-stoned, morning-after feel here that works well with the New Riders' low-key style. Their cowboy/hippie/outlaw ethic is espoused on the likes of "Last Lonely Eagle" and "Glendale Train" as horse trails meet Haight-Ashbury in an agreeably ramshackle manner.
Anyone who enjoyed the Grateful Dead's Workingman's Dead or American Beauty and wanted more, then or now, should get this record and follow that with the Riders' next two albums. With Jerry Garcia and Mickey Hart in tow and the Jefferson Airplane's Spencer Dryden playing what drums Hart didn't, plus Commander Cody at the piano, New Riders of the Purple Sage is some of the most spaced-out country-rock of the period. Even ignoring the big names working with John Dawson, David Nelson, and Dave Torbert, however, this is a good record, crossing swords with the Byrds, the Burrito Brothers, and even Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young and holding its own; maybe a few of the cuts (especially "Henry") are predictable at times, but mostly NRPS was full of surprises (the amazingly sweet, brittle guitars, in particular) and has tunes that have held up well: "Portland Woman," "Whatcha Gonna Do," "I Don't Know You," and "Louisiana ...
| | Wynonna Revelations CD (1996)
All Night Long album
$5.85 All tracks have been digitally mastered using HDCD technology.
"Change The World," written by Gordon Kennedy, Wayne Kirkpatrick and Tommy Sims, won the 1997 Grammy Award for Song Of The Year.
Wynonna had no problem with the spotlight; or, as the tabloids regularly revealed, with opening up her private life for all to poke through and ponder. For all of her cultivating of celebrity, her albums continued to turn down the lights and focus on the softer glow of emotional verities her albums. Revelations is another worthy solo effort by the younger member of the Judds, the mother-daughter duo through which she first found massive fame. Often somber, and just as often right on the money, she casts a blue tint to several reflective songs that examine spirituality (without sermons) and the quiet discoveries that come with mature relationships. Ballads ...
| | Doug Gazlay-Yuletide Friends CD (2005)
All Night Long CD music
$12.49
| | Noel Paul Stookey Circuit Rider CD (2006)
All Night Long music CDs
$15.15
| | Mood Synaesthesia CD (2008)
All Night Long songs
$9.35 The Mood has been making quite a name for itself in New York City\'s music scene. This five-piece boasts infectious ...
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