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Shelton Brothers (Bob And Joe) - Ain't No Use To Worry Anymore / Old Age Pension Blues flac album

Shelton Brothers (Bob And Joe) - Ain't No Use To Worry Anymore / Old Age Pension Blues flac album
  • Performer Shelton Brothers (Bob And Joe)
  • Title Ain't No Use To Worry Anymore / Old Age Pension Blues
  • Date of release 1940
  • Style Western Swing
  • Other formats MMF RA MP4 MPC MIDI MP3 AU
  • Genre World & Folk & Country
  • Size MP3 1393 mb
  • Size FLAC 1527 mb
  • Rating: 4.2
  • Votes: 550

The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine (Anymore)" is a song written by Bob Crewe and Bob Gaudio. Cher and Keane have also recorded the song

So it ain't no use in calling out my name, gal Like you never done before And it ain't no use in calling out my name, gal I can't hear you any more. I'm a-thinking and a-wonderin' walking down the road I once loved a woman, a child I am told I give her my heart but she wanted my soul But don't think twice, it's all right. So long honey, baby Where I'm bound, I can't tell Goodbye's too good a word, babe So I'll just say fare thee well. Don't Think Twice It's All Right" lyrics provided for educational purposes and personal use only.

There ain't no reason things are this way It's how they've always been and they intend to stay I can't explain why we live this way We do it every day. Preachers on the podiums speaking of saints Prophets on the sidewalk begging for change Old ladies laughing from the fire escape Cursing my name. I got a basket full of lemons and they all taste the same A window and a pigeon with a broken wing You could spend your whole life working for something Just to have it taken away

Other tributes to him include Bob Dylan’s song Blind Willie McTell and some from the White Stripes, who dedicated De Stijl to him and covered Southern Can Is Mine. Jack White’s Third Man later collaborated with Document Records to release all of McTell’s recordings on vinyl. T-Bone Walker: Call It Stormy Monday. A follower of Blind Lemon Jefferson, whom he’d often help get around to gigs due to the elder man’s lack of eyesight, the Dallas-based Walker inspired many of the greats. His subtle-yet-complex melodic guitar playing was a huge influence on .

The Aerith and Bob trope as used in popular culture. In some fantasy settings, people have names that you would expect to see in real life. In a group consisting of Sithis, Travok, Anastrianna and Kairon, the human fighter named Bob II sticks out. Especially when he's identical to Bob I, who was killed by kobolds. Advertisement: In some fantasy settings, people have names that you would expect to see in real life. In others, names are made up to sound exotic. And then you have the mixed approach: people named Zelor and Lithnara alongside people named James and Catherine. That's Aerith and Bob.

Jonas Brothers - Trust. Marshmello & Kane Brown - One Thing Right. Poets Of The Fall - The Beautiful Ones. Sublime - Doin' Time. Tony Bennett - I'm Thru with Love. Tony Bennett - Man That Got Away. Til we ain't strangers anymore. Lay your head on my pillow. There ain't no need to lie. Самой себе не нужно лгать. Tell me who you think you see. Расскажи, кого ты видишь, When you look into my eyes. Когда смотришь мне в глаза. Let's put our two hearts back together. Оставим на полу осколки, And we'll leave the broken pieces on the floor.

Bob Dylan and Johnny Cash had formed a mutual admiration society even before they met in the early 1960s. Of course, I knew of him before he ever heard of me," Dylan wrote shortly after Cash's death in 2003. In '55 or '56, 'I Walk the Line' played all summer on the radio, and it was different than anything else you had ever heard. Five years later, when Dylan was in Nashville recording his ninth studio album, Cash was recording in the studio next door. He decided to drop in. On February 17 and 18, 1969, Cash and Dylan recorded more than a dozen duets. Only one of them, a version of Dylan's "Girl From the North Country," made it onto the album, Nashville Skyline.

Tracklist Hide Credits

A Ain't No Use To Worry Anymore
Songwriter – Hy Heath, Johnny Lange, Lew Porter
B Old Age Pension Blues
Written-By – Sugar Creek Boys

Companies, etc.

  • Manufactured By – Decca Records, Inc.

Credits

  • Bass [Uncredited] – Hezzie Bryant
  • Fiddle [Uncredited] – Cliff Bruner
  • Guitar [Uncredited] – Dickie McBride
  • Harmony Vocals [Uncredited] – Bob Shelton
  • Lead Vocals [Uncredited] – Joe Shelton
  • Mandolin [Electric Mandolin, Uncredited] – Leo Raley
  • Steel Guitar [Uncredited] – Bob Dunn

Notes

Side A recorded in Houston, TX, September 4, 1939; side B recorded in Houston, September 3, 1939.

Credits and recording information from "Discography of Western Swing and Hot String Bands, 1928-1942" by Cary Ginell and Kevin Coffey.

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Matrix / Runout (Side A Label): 66387
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B Label): 66381