Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. 29 Nights ( CD, Album) Decca. DRNSD-70032. Canada. 1998. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 1998 CD release of "29 Nights" on Discogs.

    • (1)
    • 1
  2. Tammy Rogers is the eponymous solo debut album by Grammy winning member of The SteelDrivers, Tammy Rogers. The album was released by Rogers' own label, Dead Reckoning Records , which was formed with fellow musicians Kieran Kane , Kevin Welch , Mike Henderson and Harry Stinson , all of which appear on this album.

    • Country
  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Tammy_RogersTammy Rogers - Wikipedia

    Tammy Rogers (born 1966) is an American country music singer, songwriter and musician. In addition to releasing three albums on the Dead Reckoning Records label (which she founded with Kieran Kane ), she is also a founding member of the Grammy Award winning bluegrass group The SteelDrivers and works as a studio musician, primarily on fiddle , violin and viola .

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › 29_Nights29 Nights - Wikipedia

    Danni Leigh chronology. 29 Nights. (1998) A Shot of Whiskey and a Prayer. (2001) 29 Nights is the début album by Danni Leigh. It was released in 1998 via Decca Records, and produced by Michael Knox and Mark Wright. The album includes the single "If the Jukebox Took Teardrops," which peaked at 57 on the Hot Country Songs charts.

  5. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 1998 CD release of "29 Nights" on Discogs.

  6. As songwriters, musicians, and friends, Thomm Jutz and Tammy Rogers explore the Appalachian sounds that inspire them on Surely Will Be Singing, their first-ever album together. Recorded in their home studios in Nashville, these 12 original songs echo the acoustic production, lyricism and vocal blend of their folk and bluegrass heroes while ...

  7. Grammy-winning fiddle player, vocalist, and songwriter Tammy Rogers performs two songs and talks about her wide-ranging career as a studio and road musician and as a recording artist in an interview with the Museum’s Peter Cooper.