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Dust off those vinyl records and take a groovy trip down memory lane! We're revisiting those spectacular 60s tunes that ...
Tracks like “Changes,” “No More Tears,” “Suicide Solution,” “Diary of a Madman,” and “Mr. Crowley” just missed our top seven.
They were singing generic late-‘60s pop, often penned by Fuller. The songs played on Puckett’s powerful baritone and his apparently unquenchable thirst for young women.
North Carolinian songwriter, vocalist, guitarist, and Producer Chris Stamey’s new album, Anything Is Possible, arrived in ...
This song is actually a stellar example of how good Don and Phil Everly were at close harmony vocal stylings. It’s really a lovely song, complete with an unusual and unique structure that lacks verses ...
Considered one of the earliest examples of a Countrypolitan sound, the single was also a Top 40 hit for Ray Price on the Country chart.
Tom Lehrer, the sardonic singer-songwriter-pianist who rose to national fame after his dark, tartly funny topical songs were ...
Among these songs was the 1962 local hit “The Gypsy Cried,” The track was eventually licensed for national release by the Roulette label, peaking at No. 24 on the pop charts in 1963.
She followed up that success in 1965 with two separate full-lengths: a pop-leaning self-titled effort, and Come My Way, which contained a robust, confident spin on traditional folk songs.