| | Aaron Tippin All American Country CD Aaron Tippin Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
The ten-track All American Country collection samples Aaron Tippin's most commercially productive period in the '90s, including the chart-toppers "Working Man's Ph.D.," "My Blue Angel," "You've Got to Stand for Something," and his first number one hit from 1992, "There Ain't Nothin' Wrong With the Radio," as well as a few lesser-known singles and album cuts. While this is an affordable disc, it eliminates several of Tippin's other hits. Pick up The Ultimate Aaron Tippin on BMG Heritage instead. ~ Al Campbell
Live Recording All American Country Music All American Country Music Review Purchase All American Country CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Desert Rose Band Featuring... CD (1987)
All American Country album
$6.79
| | Desert Rose Band Dozen Roses: Greatest Hits CD (1991) Reissued
All American Country CD music
$6.79
| | Trans-Siberian Orchestra Beethoven's Last Night CD (2000)
All American Country music CDs
$11.69
| | Louvin Brothers I Don't Believe You've Met My Baby CD (2002)
All American Country songs
$9.05
| | Barry Williams Presents: One-Hit Wonders Of The 70S CD (2006)
All American Country album
$7.49 Liner Note Author: John Morthland.
| | Emmylou Harris Anthology: The Warner-Reprise Years CDs (2001)
All American Country CD music
$22.69 Were it not for Gram Parsons and Emmylou Harris, the universally acknowledged king and queen of progressive country, countless young alt-counry bands would have never donned their faded Levi's and battered Telecasters in the first place, and even if they did, they'd surely sound a lot different. In 2001, the smart folks at Rhino Records saw fit to release comprehensive two-disc anthologies of both Harris and Parsons, highlighting ...
| | Mac Martin & The Dixie Traveler Best Of Mac Martin & The Dixie Travelers: 24 Bluegrass Favorites CD (1998)
All American Country music CDs
$8.99 Mac Martin & The Dixie Travelers: Mac Martin (vocals, guitar); Bob Artis (vocals, mandolin); Mike Carson (vocals, fiddle); Billy Bryant (guitar, banjo); Frank Basista (bass).
Pittsburgh native William Colleran, a.k.a. Mac Martin, has been playing straight-ahead, traditional bluegrass music since the late '40s. As expected, his music is influenced by Bill Monroe, Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs. He owes a lot, stylistically, to Lester Flatt in the way he shapes and sings his vocal phrases, as well as the way he plays rhythm guitar complete with copies and variations of Flatt's bass runs. This disc is a best-of culled from the four LPs which he recorded for Rural Rhythm Records between 1968 and 1971, each of which was praised as the best of the year in the trades. Though it claims to be remastered from the original tapes, the disc isn't equalized, which results in some songs being louder than others ...
| | Darryl Worley I Miss My Friend CD (2002)
All American Country songs
$7.29 Country hunk Darryl Worley's sophomore album is a tour de force of country hooks, steel guitars, and old-timey fiddles--and incidentally some pretty fine songwriting, as evidenced by songs such as "I Wouldn't Mind the Shackles" and the title track, both of which deal with the traditional country dilemmas of love and loss, and how to get a hit record out of them. There's a refreshing lack of gloss in I MISS MY FRIEND, recalling Dwight Yoakam's early releases, with some hot picking courtesy of Nashville's finest, a great road ...
| | Only Jim Reeves Album CD (2004) Import
All American Country album
$12.19
| | Greatest Songs Of The Eighties Karaoke: Greatest Songs Of The 80S 2 CD (2004)
$25.65 | | John Tesh Red Rocks Platinum CDs (2005)
All American Country CD music
$8.79
| | Deep Blue Organ Trio Goin' To Town: Live At The Green Mill CD (2006)
All American Country music CDs
$12.65
| | Jerry Douglas Best Of The Sugar Hill Years CD (2007)
All American Country songs
$15.05
| | Joshua Peek Central Texas Kid CD (2009)
All American Country album
$18.99 Josh was born and raised in the Texas Hill Country, in Comfort Texas. He participated in sports and music throughout his school years. After graduating high school, he went onto college at Tarleton State University. After returning home shortly after beginning college to help his family, Josh went back to school, this time at South Plains College in Levelland to study music. Josh acknowledges that this is some of the best music training he could have gotten, and wishes he could have spent more time there because he feels that he could have learned so much more, but again he returned home to help his family. Josh had aspirations of becoming a professional bull rider, but chose to end his bull riding career when he suffered an injury in 2004 while riding a bull that left him with nine broken ribs and a punctured lung. While Josh had always loved and performed in music, the end to his bull riding career made him more focused on the music.Josh got his start in performing music at the age of 8 singing at open mic night at the Inn of the Hills in Kerrville. He then began playing venues all around the hill country on a regular basis as he grew up. His first CD came out in 2001 under Cowboy Capital Records in Bandera. The CD was titled “Bull Rider’s Dream” and contained 10 tracks that were written by Josh about his love of bull riding and rodeo, and about growing up in the Texas Hill Country. Five years later, he released his first live album, “Live at Nelson City,” recorded at Nelson City Dance Hall, where he performed some of the tracks from the first CD, and some tracks that were yet to be released. Then in 2007, he released his next studio CD, “Central Texas Kid” which was recorded at Flashpoint Studio in Austin and produced by John ...
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