Tommy Cash - That Certain One (2023) [Hi-Res]
BAND/ARTIST: Tommy Cash
- Title: That Certain One
- Year Of Release: 1973 / 2023
- Label: Epic - Legacy
- Genre: Country
- Quality: FLAC (tracks) [192kHz/24bit]
- Total Time: 32:41
- Total Size: 1.17 GB / 199 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. That Certain One
02. You'll Need the Love (I Have for You One Day)
03. The Young New Mexican Puppeteer
04. 'Till I Can't Take It Anymore
05. Love is Gone
06. I Had a Talk With the Man
07. You're Everything
08. I Owe the World to You
09. Someday When All My Dreams Come True
10. I Know the Feelin'
11. Mac Arthur's Hand
12. I Recall a Gypsy Woman
01. That Certain One
02. You'll Need the Love (I Have for You One Day)
03. The Young New Mexican Puppeteer
04. 'Till I Can't Take It Anymore
05. Love is Gone
06. I Had a Talk With the Man
07. You're Everything
08. I Owe the World to You
09. Someday When All My Dreams Come True
10. I Know the Feelin'
11. Mac Arthur's Hand
12. I Recall a Gypsy Woman
Younger brother of the Man in Black, Tommy Cash enjoyed some chart success in his own right. Born April 5, 1940, in Dyess, AR, Tommy was eight years younger than big brother Johnny. He formed his first band in high school, but enlisted in the Army soon after graduation. While serving in Germany during 1958, he DJed for Armed Services Radio -- perhaps contributing in some part to the incredible success of Johnny's hit of that year, "Ballad of a Teenage Queen."
After resuming civilian life in the early '60s, Tommy played with Hank Williams, Jr. and gained his own recording contract from Musicor by 1967. After a move to United Artists, he just missed the country Top 40 in 1968 with "The Sounds of Goodbye." Transferred yet again, to Epic Records, Tommy delivered his biggest hit -- "Six White Horses," a tribute to JFK, RFK, and Martin Luther King, Jr. -- in late 1969. The single hit number four and was followed by two Top Ten singles in 1970, "Rise and Shine" and "One Song Away."
During the '70s, Cash continued to tour and record -- for Epic, Elektra, 20th Century, and Monument -- but his only Top 20 entry occurred when "I Recall a Gypsy Woman" made number 16 in 1973. © John Bush
After resuming civilian life in the early '60s, Tommy played with Hank Williams, Jr. and gained his own recording contract from Musicor by 1967. After a move to United Artists, he just missed the country Top 40 in 1968 with "The Sounds of Goodbye." Transferred yet again, to Epic Records, Tommy delivered his biggest hit -- "Six White Horses," a tribute to JFK, RFK, and Martin Luther King, Jr. -- in late 1969. The single hit number four and was followed by two Top Ten singles in 1970, "Rise and Shine" and "One Song Away."
During the '70s, Cash continued to tour and record -- for Epic, Elektra, 20th Century, and Monument -- but his only Top 20 entry occurred when "I Recall a Gypsy Woman" made number 16 in 1973. © John Bush
Year 2023 | Country | FLAC / APE | HD & Vinyl
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