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Oldies Goldies Oasis

Oldies Goldies Oasis

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Country

George Jones – Kiss An Angel Good Mornin’

Introduction: Released in 1973 on the album “Who’s Gonna Fill Their Shoes,” “Kiss An Angel...

Country

Alan Jackson – Her Life’s A Song

Introduction: Released in 2002 on his album Drive (You Crazy), “Her Life’s A Song” is...

Country

George Jones – She’s As Close As I Can Get To Loving You

Introduction: Released in 1970 on the album Will You Visit Me on Sunday, “She’s As...

Country

A Fading Memory: Gene Watson’s “Nothing About Her Reminds Me of You”

Introduction: Released in 1981 on the album Old Loves Never Die, “Nothing About Her Reminds...

Country

Buck Owens – “Together Again”

Introduction: Released in 1964 as the “B-side” to his chart-topping single “My Heart Skips a...

Country

A Timeless Country Ballad: George Strait’s “You Can’t Make A Heart Love Somebody”

Introduction: Released in December 1994 as the second single from his critically acclaimed album Lead...

Country

George Jones & Melba Montgomery – Please Be My Love

Introduction: Released in 1964 on the B-side of their single “Will There Ever Be Another”,...

Country

Alan Jackson – When The Love Factor’s High

Introduction: Released in 2008 on the album Good Time, “When The Love Factor’s High” is...

Country

George Jones and Tammy Wynette – Living On Easy Street

Introduction: “Living On Easy Street,” a 1971 country duet by American country music legends George...

Country

The Oak Ridge Boys – Gonna Take A Lot Of River

Introduction: Released in 1988 as the lead single from their album Monongahela, “Gonna Take A...

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Recent Posts

  • “I Don’t Have a Choice”: The Five Words That Shattered the Elvis & Priscilla Fairytale
  • ELVIS Spent The Night In This DEAD MALL Days Before He Died!
  • The Untold Truth of Bob Seger: From Broken Hearts to Broken Records — What the Legend Never Said Aloud
  • I still get goosebumps thinking about that unforgettable moment at the 1974 Charlotte 500—when Marty Robbins didn’t hesitate to put someone else’s life ahead of his own. With Richard Childress’s car stalled helplessly across the track, Marty made a split-second decision that could’ve cost him everything. Instead of risking a deadly collision, he veered hard and slammed his own car into the wall. The crash left him with broken ribs, a fractured tailbone, and 32 stitches—but what he said afterward still echoes louder than the roar of any engine: “I was just glad Richard was okay.” That kind of courage—quiet, instinctive, and full of heart—isn’t just rare on the racetrack. It’s the same spirit he poured into songs like “Big Iron”—where a lone figure stands tall in the face of danger, not for glory, but because it’s the right thing to do. That was Marty Robbins. A hero, on and off the track.
  • The Seat That Saved His Life: Waylon Jennings and the Ghosts of February 3, 1959

You Missed

Oldies Musics

“I Don’t Have a Choice”: The Five Words That Shattered the Elvis & Priscilla Fairytale

Oldies Musics

ELVIS Spent The Night In This DEAD MALL Days Before He Died!

Oldies Musics

The Untold Truth of Bob Seger: From Broken Hearts to Broken Records — What the Legend Never Said Aloud

Oldies Musics

I still get goosebumps thinking about that unforgettable moment at the 1974 Charlotte 500—when Marty Robbins didn’t hesitate to put someone else’s life ahead of his own. With Richard Childress’s car stalled helplessly across the track, Marty made a split-second decision that could’ve cost him everything. Instead of risking a deadly collision, he veered hard and slammed his own car into the wall. The crash left him with broken ribs, a fractured tailbone, and 32 stitches—but what he said afterward still echoes louder than the roar of any engine: “I was just glad Richard was okay.” That kind of courage—quiet, instinctive, and full of heart—isn’t just rare on the racetrack. It’s the same spirit he poured into songs like “Big Iron”—where a lone figure stands tall in the face of danger, not for glory, but because it’s the right thing to do. That was Marty Robbins. A hero, on and off the track.

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