Deuces High
Mountain Man will be taking the lead for the Deuces Wild Endurance Festival in 2020. They will work closely with Debbie and Seton to ensure a smooth transition and high quality experience. Find out more about Mountain Man and see our other events here.
Get the latest music news, watch video clips from music shows, events, and exclusive performances from your favorite artists. Discover new music on MTV. The 1969 and 1970 Yenko Novas, also called Yenko Deuces, were rare high-performance COPO Chevy Novas built by Don Yenko with either a 427 engine or an LT1 350 engine- Super Chevy Magzine.
High Lonesome | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by | ||||
Released | November 5, 1976 | |||
Genre | Southern rock, country, bluegrass | |||
Length | 38:11 | |||
Label | Epic | |||
Producer | Paul Hornsby | |||
The Charlie Daniels Band chronology | ||||
|
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
High Lonesome is the eighth studio album by Charlie Daniels and the fifth as the Charlie Daniels Band, released on November 5, 1976. Many of the tracks pay homage to pulp Western fiction and, with permission, the album’s title was named after the 1962 Western novel by Louis L’Amour.
Track listing[edit]
All songs composed by the Charlie Daniels Band (Charlie Daniels, Tom Crain, Taz DiGregorio, Fred Edwards, Charles Hayward & Don Murray), except where indicated:
Side one[edit]
- 'Billy the Kid' (Daniels) – 5:49
- 'Carolina' – 3:54
- 'High Lonesome' – 5:03
- 'Running With the Crowd' – 4:01
Side two[edit]
- 'Right Now Tennessee Blues' (Daniels) – 3:36
- 'Roll Mississippi' – 3:12
- 'Slow Song' (Daniels) – 3:55
- 'Tennessee' (Crain) – 4:43
- 'Turned My Head Around' – 3:52
All of the credits above are direct from the original 1976 Epic LP.[2] There has been some confusion as to certain of the album's songwriting credits over time because sites like AllMusic have incorrectly modified the credits by incorporating songs with the same titles together. For example, 'Billy the Kid'. 'Dean' is shown as a co-writer [3] sometimes now because Billy Dean released a song with the same title in 1991. Another example is 'High Lonesome', which was written by the Charlie Daniels Band. Allmusic now incorrectly cites Gretchen Peters as a co-writer.[3] This is because she wrote a song called 'High Lonesome' in 1991 for Randy Travis's album, High Lonesome. Yet another case is with the song 'Birmingham Blues' that Charlie Daniels wrote for their 1975 album, Nightrider. In 1977, Jeff Lynne also wrote a song called 'Birmingham Blues' for his band, Electric Light Orchestra's album, Out of the Blue, and now Allmusic shows the 1975 Charlie Daniels song as being co-written by Lynne[4] (but not the other way around), which is nonsensical. But once one authoritative site publishes incorrect data, the scrapers spread it around the internet as factual.
Personnel[edit]
The Charlie Daniels Band:[5]
- Charlie Daniels – acoustic guitar, banjo, fiddle, guitar, violin, electric guitar, vocals, slide guitar
- Tom Crain – acoustic guitar, electric guitar, vocals, slide guitar, vocal harmony, lead vocals on 'Tennessee'
- Taz DiGregorio – organ, piano, keyboards, vocals, vocal harmony, lead vocals on 'Roll Mississippi'
- Fred Edwards – congas, drums
- Charlie Hayward – bass guitar
- Don Murray – congas, drums
Delegation Duces High Cd
Additional musicians:[5]
- George McCorkle – acoustic guitar on 'Billy The Kid'
- Toy Caldwell – steel guitar on 'Slow Song' and 'Tennessee'
Production personnel:[5]
- Paul Hornsby – producer
- Kurt Kinzel – engineer
- Richard Schoff – assistant engineer
- Don Rubin – executive producer
- George Marino – mastering
- Joseph E. Sullivan – production supervisor
References[edit]
- ^'allmusic ((( High Lonesome > Overview )))'. allmusic.com. Retrieved 2010-08-07.
- ^https://www.discogs.com/The-Charlie-Daniels-Band-High-Lonesome/master/355425
- ^ abhttps://www.allmusic.com/album/high-lonesome-mw0000691008
- ^https://www.allmusic.com/album/nightrider-mw0000311917
- ^ abc'Charlie Daniels Band, The - High Lonesome (Vinyl, LP) at Discogs'. www.discogs.com. Retrieved 2010-08-07.