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  2. High Water Everywhere - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_Water_Everywhere

    High Water Everywhere. " High Water Everywhere " is a Delta blues song recorded in 1929 by the blues singer Charley Patton. The song is about the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 and how it affected residents of the Mississippi Delta, particularly the mistreatment of African Americans. Patton recorded it during his second session with Paramount ...

  3. Keep Climbing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keep_Climbing

    A lyric video for the song was uploaded to YouTube at the time of release. The video features the lyrics appearing above an aerial shot of a piano, on which Goodrem is playing the piano part for the song. [5] A live performance recorded at the NSW Art Gallery was released on May 23, while a studio recording video was released on June 15.

  4. List of blues standards - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_blues_standards

    Blues standards are blues songs that have attained a high level of recognition due to having been widely performed and recorded. [1] They represent the best known and most interpreted blues songs that are seen as standing the test of time. [2] Blues standards come from different eras and styles, such as ragtime - vaudeville, Delta and other ...

  5. Hey Little Cobra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hey_Little_Cobra

    "Hey Little Cobra" is a song released in 1963 by The Rip Chords about the Shelby Cobra. The song was produced by Terry Melcher and Bruce Johnston, who also sang vocals. [2] The song spent 14 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, peaking at No. 4, [3] while reaching No. 5 on Canada's CHUM Hit Parade [4] and No. 3 on New Zealand's "Lever Hit ...

  6. Going Down the Road Feeling Bad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Going_Down_the_Road...

    The song was recorded by many artists through the years. The first known recording is from 1923 by Henry Whitter, an Appalachian singer, [2] [3] as "Lonesome Road Blues". The earliest versions of the lyrics are from the perspective of an inmate in prison with the refrain, "I'm down in that jail on my knees" and a reference to eating "corn bread and beans."

  7. Mistaken Identity (Delta Goodrem album) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mistaken_Identity_(Delta...

    Entertainment.ie. [3] Mistaken Identity is the second studio album by Australian singer Delta Goodrem, released in Australia on 8 November 2004, a day before Goodrem's twentieth birthday, by Epic and Daylight Records. Goodrem co-wrote some of the album with Guy Chambers, who also produced the album with Richard Flack and Steve Power.

  8. Robert Johnson (guitars) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Johnson_(guitars)

    Guitars Johnson played. Robert Johnson played various guitars, produced in the 1920s and 1930s. The guitar he is holding in the studio portrait, where he's dressed in a suit, is a Gibson Guitar Corporation model L-1 flat top, which was a small body acoustic produced between 1926 and 1937. The guitar could have been a studio prop, or belonged to ...

  9. Johnny Guitar (song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johnny_Guitar_(song)

    Peggy Lee. " Johnny Guitar " is a song written by Peggy Lee (lyrics) and Victor Young (music) and was the title track of the 1954 film of the same name, directed by Nicholas Ray and starring Joan Crawford. The music loosely echoes several themes from Spanish Dance No. 5: Andaluza by Enrique Granados, which was written for piano, but is often ...