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  1. 24. Aug. 1993 · 1. Smoke! (That Cigarette) Merle Travis. 2:52. San Antonio Rose. Willis Brothers. 2:21. 3. Waltz Across Texas. Mac Wiseman. 2:28. 4. It Wasn't God Who Made Honky-Tonk Angels. Rose Lee Maphis. 2:51. 5. Sadie Was a Lady. Johnny Bond, Tex Ritter. 3:53. 6. Fort Worth Hambone Blues. Johnny Gimble. 3:15. 7. The Last Letter. Mac Wiseman. 3:29. 8.

  2. Artist: Mac Wiseman Album: Texas Honky Tonk Hits, Vol. 1 Year: 1993. This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to our policies regarding the use of cookies. Install the free Online Radio Box app for your smartphone and listen t ...

  3. Johnny Gimble & The Texas Swing Pioneers – Fort Worth Hambone Blues: 3:13: 2: Mac Wiseman – Waltz Across Texas: 2:28: 3: Merle Travis – Smoke! Smoke! Smoke! (That Cigarette) 2:47: 4: Rose Lee Maphis – It Wasn't God Who Made Honky-Tonk Angels: 2:52: 5: Mac Wiseman – Bubbles In My Beer: 2:32: 6: Johnny Bond – Just An Average Day: 2:41 ...

    • 5
    • “Honky Tonk Blues”
    • “Walking The Floor Over You”
    • “Bubbles in My Beer”
    • “Slippin’ Around”
    • “If You’Ve Got The Money (I’ve Got The Time)”
    • “The Wild Side of Life”
    • “Honky-Tonk Man”
    • “Crazy Arms”
    • “The Race Is On”
    • “Whiskey River”

    Al Dexter

    This is considered the first country song to use the term “honky-tonk,” though the first of any genre was “Down in Honky Tonky Town,” released two decades earlier, about an African American jazz club.

    Ernest Tubb

    For my money, nobody—not even Hank Williams—could out-honky-tonk ol’ E.T. And while Tubb left us a whole jukebox of country classics, this was the single that jump-started the honky-tonk subgenre.

    Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys

    Cowritten by the incredible Cindy Walker, this western swing/honky-tonk mash-up still stands out among the crowded field of drinking songs.

    Floyd Tillman

    This might not be the first cheatin’ song, but it’s certainly one of the first to become a hit. Seventy years later, it remains a staple.

    Lefty Frizzell

    Frizzell died at 47 from decades of hard living, but he left behind some of the finest honky-tonk songs ever recorded. This is one of them.

    Hank Thompson

    This weepy standard admonishes a woman who chooses “the gay nightlife” over domesticity, a conceit that Kitty Wells countered in her classic rebuke, “It Wasn’t God Who Made Honky-Tonk Angels.”

    Johnny Horton

    Few songs get the blood flowing on a Saturday night like this bass-thumpin’ ode to hard-core honky-tonking, a fact confirmed by the chart-topping success of Dwight Yoakam’s cover three decades after Horton’s original.

    Ray Price

    Price redefined honky-tonk music when he used this shuffling 4/4 arrangement, a rhythmic innovation that would eventually become a model for country songwriters.

    George Jones

    The Possum was already moving toward the polished Nashville sound, but this hit proved he still had one boot firmly planted in the honky-tonk tradition.

    Willie Nelson

    Though Nelson wrote some of the most popular jukebox hits of all time (Patsy Cline’s version of Nelson’s “Crazy” is second only to Elvis Presley’s “Hound Dog”), it was his former bandmate Johnny Bush who wrote what has become one of Nelson’s signature tunes.

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  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Mac_WisemanMac Wiseman - Wikipedia

    Mac Wiseman recorded splendid and often groundbreaking music for more than seventy years, remaining relevant and productive even in his nineties. He was a titan of bluegrass music's first generation, though bluegrass never defined him. He helped found the CMA, he headed Dot Records' country division, and he recorded with everyone from big band legend Woody Herman to Rock and Roll Hall of Famer ...

  5. 1. Jimmy Brown the Newsboy. 2:02. The Prisoner’s Song. 2:55. 3. Barbara Allen. 5:04. 4. Bringing Mary Home. 3:22. 5. Poison Love. 2:00. 6. Going Like Wildfire. 2:41. 7. Don’t Make Me Go to Bed and I’ll Be Good. 3:45. 8. ‘Tis Sweet to Be Remembered. 2:54. 9. I Still Write Your Name In the Sand. 2:35. 10. Wabash Cannonball. 2:44. 11.

  6. Texas Honky-Tonk Hits by Johnny Gimble released in 1988. Find album reviews, track lists, credits, awards and more at AllMusic.