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Oldies Goldies Oasis

Oldies Goldies Oasis

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Oldies Musics

Engelbert Humperdinck – To Get To You

Introduction: Engelbert Humperdinck’s “To Get To You” is a poignant ballad that encapsulates the intensity...

Oldies Musics

Jive Talkin’ – Bee Gees

Introduction: “Jive Talkin'” is a disco anthem by the Bee Gees, released in 1975 as...

R&R Elvis Presley

Elvis Presley – It’s Over

Introduction: It’s Over” is a poignant ballad recorded by Elvis Presley in 1972, marking a...

Oldies Musics

Engelbert Humperdinck – Let Me Into Your Life

Introduction: Engelbert Humperdinck, a name synonymous with romance and elegance in the world of music,...

Oldies Musics

Please Don’t Turn Out The Lights – Bee Gees

Introduction: “Please Don’t Turn Out the Lights” is a poignant ballad by the iconic British-Australian...

Oldies Musics

George Strait – If You Ain’t Lovin’ (You Ain’t Livin’)

Introduction: If You Ain’t Lovin’ (You Ain’t Livin’)” is a timeless country classic that has...

Oldies Musics

George Jones & Tammy Wynette – Just Someone I Used To Know

Introduction: “Just Someone I Used To Know” is a poignant country duet recorded by the...

Oldies Musics

Peter, Paul and Mary – If I Had a Hammer

Introduction: “If I Had a Hammer,” written in 1949 by Pete Seeger and Lee Hays...

Oldies Musics

Elvis Presley – Lonely Man

Introduction: “Lonely Man,” a poignant ballad penned by Bennie Benjamin and Sol Marcus, found its...

Oldies Musics

Gerry Rafferty – Baker Street

Introduction: Released in 1978, Baker Street by Gerry Rafferty became a defining track of the...

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Recent Posts

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