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  1. May 23, 2023 · 1. Carole With An E. Brennen Leigh. 03:35. 2. Convoy. C.W. McCall. 03:50. 3. Teddy Bear. Red Sovine. 04:58. 4. Six Days On the Road. Dave Dudley. 02:37. 5. Truck Driving Woman. Norma Jean. 02:21. 6. Eighteen Wheels And A Dozen Roses. Kathy Mattea. 03:19. 7. East Bound and Down. Jerry Reed. 02:46. 8. Hello, I'm A Truck.

    • "Hammer Going Down," Chris Knight
    • "Truck Driving Man," Terry Fell
    • "Girl on The Billboard," Del Reeves
    • "Phantom 309," Red Sovine
    • A Tombstone Every Mile, Dick Curless
    • "Eighteen Wheels and A Dozen Roses," Kathy Mattea
    • "Me & Bobby McGee," Roger Miller
    • "White Line Fever," Merle Haggard
    • "Convoy," C.W. Mccall
    • "Roll on (Eighteen Wheeler)," Alabama

    In this song written for the movie Black Dog, Knight's truck driver is falling for a girl in Louisville and doing all he can to get back to her. Knight practically punches the words of this song, and you can hear the sound of the rig shifting at the end of the chorus with a brief drum hit. The song is urgent and demanding, making it a dark counterp...

    Coffee and a jukebox: two things that keep a truck driver going. Fell originally released this fast-paced, harmonica-heavy track in 1954. Buck Owens fills it out a bit, trading the harmonica for a guitar, and drops the fourth verse.

    "Who is the girl wearing nothing but a smile and a towel in the picture on the billboard in the field by the big old highway?" asks Reeves without pausing to take a breath. Reeves knows enough to slow down when he's passing the billboard, as she often causes drivers to crash. After passing the picture for days on end, Reeves finally stops and asks ...

    This is a haunting tune in which the singer is picked up by Big Joe and his rig the Phantom 309. Big Joe drives the hitchhiker through the night before dropping him off at a rest stop in the morning with some spare change to buy coffee. As he's getting his coffee, the singer is told that Big Joe died years before, having crashed while trying to avo...

    One of the most haunting trucker songs to impact the mainstream (it reached country's Top 5 in 1965) tells the legend of Haynesville Woods: an area in northern Maine infamous for truck driving accidents. Johnny Cash told a similar story with a 1989's "Monteagle Mountain," which is about those two unnerving stretches on Interstate 24 between Nashvil...

    While most truck driving songs deal with the risks of the road or poke fun at truckers in a good-natured sort of way, one of Mattea's signature songs looks at drivers as faithful spouses with a longing to comfortably retire.

    When Miller picks Bobby up on the side of the highway, it will change his life as a trucker forever. Together they share stories and beer as they head towards California. However, because no truck driving song can ever end happy, Bobby leaves him by the end of the song, preferring to settle down than spend the rest of her life on the road.

    A movie of the same name inspired Haggard's tragic tale of a truck driving man who sees his death approaching but can't quit. The song tells the story of a working man who has never known anything but the lines on the highway, and though he no longer gets any satisfaction from driving, he doesn't know how to quit it.

    Sure, it's a novelty song, but McCall talk-sang his way to a crossover hit in 1975 amid America's CB radio craze. It later inspired a 1978 movie which stars Kris Kristofferson. McCall's original version topped Billboard's country and all-genre Hot 100 charts. It also had a global appeal, reaching No. 1 in Canada, New Zealand and Australia.

    This Dave Loggins original became Alabama's 12th consecutive No. 1 single when it reached the top of the charts in 1984. In its lyrics, a trucker is coming home to his wife and kids when his rig jackknifes in a blizzard. However, at the end of the song, the family receives a call from the trucker, saying he'll be home, and tells them to keep rollin...

  2. Charlie Moore, Bill Napier. List of Truck-Driving Country artists ranked by popularity and relevance. Discover Truck-Driving Country albums, songs grouped by decade and listen to Truck-Driving Country Spotify playlist.

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  4. list of years in country music. Truck-driving country or Trucker country is a subgenre of country and western music. It is characterized by lyrical content about trucks (i.e. commercial vehicles, not pick-up trucks), truck drivers or truckers, and the trucking industry experience.

    • “Eastbound and Down” – Jerry Reed. Truckers were sometimes envisioned as something between modern cowboys and outlaws in the popular culture of the 1970s.
    • “Roll On (Eighteen Wheeler)” – Alabama. “Roll On (Eighteen Wheeler)” might be the most iconic trucking song of the 1980s. It’s about a trucker who goes missing while working hard to support his family.
    • “White Line Fever” – Merle Haggard. “White Line Fever” refers to a condition that interested individuals might be more familiar with as highway hypnosis.
    • “On the Road Again” – Willie Nelson. Technically, Willie Nelson wasn’t singing about trucking. After all, he wrote the song about going on tour with his bandmates.
  5. Apr 23, 2021 · The epic orchestration and colorful and quotable lyrics made “Convoy” an unlikely hit, but the song actually tapped into a long history of country music that put the spotlight on the solitary...

  6. Feb 15, 2024 · A truck driving anthem, this 2016 country song pays homage to all the " brothers of the highway " and " children of the wind " who earn their living delivering goods from point of origin to destination. They leave their families at home to criss-cross the country in big rigs, fueled by truck stop coffee and the freedom of the highway.

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