JoeTerp wrote:Robert Earle Keen - The Road Goes on Forever
Igor Zidane wrote:Was brought up on country music by me mum and dad , Every sunday morning . Merle Haggard , Don williams , Frankie Lane , Charlie Pride , tammy wynett , her sister chrystal gale . Throw a little bit of the everley brothers in there and your laffin kidda's. Glorious sunday mornings , with mum making the sunday roast and me dad thinkin he was bl00dy John wayne or summit . ahhh there's a tear in me eye now ,woof you sentemental old mut yer.
Bad Bob wrote:JoeTerp wrote:Robert Earle Keen - The Road Goes on Forever
This fecker's not even remotely good enough for this thread, Joe. Must've been a Rick Parry pick!![]()
Anyone else scared to click on Lee's link? All I can imagine our warbly tunes about rug burn on bellends and ballads of Trap 2!
woof woof ! wrote:Emmylou's a legend Bob. Her "Wreckin Ball" album took "country" music to another level.
All my Tears - from wreckin' ball
Sabre wrote:Basque country
This is the kind of stuff that would listen to my grandma when he approached the village from her house in the mountains.
Joe, I think that some of your country and this basque music have some roots in common (the basque that is northern spanish music have obvious common roots with other europeans, totally different to flamenco)
Sabre wrote:Basque country
This is the kind of stuff that would listen to my grandma when he approached the village from her house in the mountains.
Joe, I think that some of your country and this basque music have some roots in common (the basque that is northern spanish music have obvious common roots with other europeans, totally different to flamenco)
JoeTerp wrote:Sabre wrote:Basque country
This is the kind of stuff that would listen to my grandma when he approached the village from her house in the mountains.
Joe, I think that some of your country and this basque music have some roots in common (the basque that is northern spanish music have obvious common roots with other europeans, totally different to flamenco)
music like this
would probably be called more Creole or Cajun than country. But then there is certainly a fine line there as a lot of country and bluegrass musicians come from Lousiana and Texas and bring some of that bayou flavor out.
more cajun dancin'
this old guy moves pretty good
Pretty good example of a transitional sound from Cajun to Country/Western
Wish I could recall more from my ethnomusicology class (didn't really show up that much) but I do remember we spent a lot of time on Creole and Cajun.
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