Stonewall Jackson - 20 Greatest Hits (2022)

  • 27 Dec, 09:48
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Artist:
Title: 20 Greatest Hits
Year Of Release: 2022
Label: Good Time Records
Genre: Country
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:52:12
Total Size: 124 mb | 275 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Stonewall Jackson - Waterloo
02. Stonewall Jackson - Don't Be Angry
03. Stonewall Jackson - I Washed My Hands In Muddy Water
04. Stonewall Jackson - Why I'm Walkin'
05. Stonewall Jackson - Don't Be Late
06. Stonewall Jackson - Life to Go
07. Stonewall Jackson - B.J. The D.J.
08. Stonewall Jackson - Herman Schwartz
09. Stonewall Jackson - Read Between the Lines
10. Stonewall Jackson - A Wound Time Can't Erase
11. Stonewall Jackson - Shake 'Em Up, Roll 'Em
12. Stonewall Jackson - Clean Your Own Tables
13. Stonewall Jackson - I Can't Get Enough of You
14. Stonewall Jackson - My Hero and the Plastic Radio
15. Stonewall Jackson - Things to Think About
16. Stonewall Jackson - Ol' Blue
17. Stonewall Jackson - Should I Go Home
18. Stonewall Jackson - Keep Off the Grass
19. Stonewall Jackson - Love Gets All Over Me
20. Stonewall Jackson - Lovin' the Fool Out of Me

Stonewall Jackson was one of the most popular country stars of the early '60s, scoring a string of Top Ten country hits and becoming a fixture at the Grand Ole Opry with a pleading voice that seemed to reflect his hard, often-abusive upbringing on a south Georgia dirt farm. He was named after the Confederate general Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson, to whom he was related, according to family legend. When he was ten he traded his bike for a guitar and began making up songs. Some of his later hits, such as "Don't Be Angry," were written very early in his creative life. Jackson began singing professionally in the mid-'50s, moving to Nashville in 1956. Within a few days of his arrival he delivered an unsolicited demo recording to the offices of the Acuff-Rose publishing house, and executive Wesley Rose heard his singing and set up an audition for Jackson at the Grand Ole Opry. Jackson became the first entertainer to join the Opry without a recording contract, performing first on the Opry's Friday Night Frolics before his official debut. Backed by Ernest Tubb's Texas Troubadours, he proved so popular that the audience demanded four encores.


  • whiskers
  •  11:51
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Many thanks
  • mufty77
  •  22:10
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Many thanks.