Ghettos of the Mind
Bama was one of the many inmates of Parchman prison, Mississippi, that Alan Lomax and his father John Lomax spoke to and recorded in the 1930s and 1940s. Bama was 'said to be the star singer of the pen' and was in and out of jail for most of his life for various crimes ranging from murder to theft. According to Bama himself he was often arrested for doing nothing at all and was told, We'll arrest you in egvance (sic) - you gonna do something. He also said he once was arrested for getting a pig drunk and attempting to steal that. Bama was also the name of a session band from Muscle Shoals, Alabama lead by Terry Skinner & J.L. Wallace. Skinner & Wallace, along with Ken Bell, wrote their first single, Touch Me When We're Dancing, which peaked at #86 in 1979. Touch Me When We're Dancing was also covered in 1981 by The Carpenters (#16 - Hot 100/#1 AC) and a #1 hit on a Billboard Country Singles chart for Alabama in 1986. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Bama was one of the many inmates of Parchman prison, Mississippi, that Alan Lomax and his father John Lomax spoke to and recorded in the 1930s and 1940s. Bama was 'said to be the star singer of the pen' and was in and out of jail for most of his life for various crimes ranging from murder to theft. According to Bama himself he was often arrested for doing nothing at all and was told, We'll arrest you in egvance (sic) - you gonna do something. He also said he once was arrested for getting a pig drunk and attempting to steal that. Bama was also the name of a session band from Muscle Shoals, Alabama lead by Terry Skinner & J.L. Wallace. Skinner & Wallace, along with Ken Bell, wrote their first single, Touch Me When We're Dancing, which peaked at #86 in 1979. Touch Me When We're Dancing was also covered in 1981 by The Carpenters (#16 - Hot 100/#1 AC) and a #1 hit on a Billboard Country Singles chart for Alabama in 1986. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Breakout
Engerling
Herbieman
Stackerlee
Levee Camp Holler
How I Got in the Penitentiary
What Makes a Work Song Leader?
I'm Goin' Home
Ghettos of the Mind
Strongest Man I Ever Saw
Feeling Good
How I Got In the Penitentiary (interview)
What Makes a Work Song Leader? (interview)
Sweet Home Alabama
Strongest Man I Ever Saw-Tall Tale By Bama
I Got Soul
Strongest Man I Ever Saw (Tall Tale By Bama)
I Know How To Surf
Nothingness
I'm Going Home
Social Narcotics
Welfare Slave
Thanksgiving
The right to be wrong
Drunken Sister
Justice isn't blind
Blessed Marie
Blackman, My Brother
Lonesome
¿A dónde vas?
Levee Camp Hollers
Stackalee
Its Gone
Boite auto #9
Touch Me When We're Dancing
Ghettos of the Mind ['Ghettos of the Mind']
What Makes a Work Song Leader
I Don't Want You Baby
Boite auto #8
Gettin Money Screwed & Chopped
ICE
Dime
No Script
Rhodos Anthem (Publicity Stunt 2024)
Boite auto #7
Yodak Bellow Treemix
Sweet Home alambama
I’m Going Home
How I Got In The Penitentiary (interview with Bama)
What Makes A Work Song Leader (interview with Bama)
Levee Camp Holler - Bama
Anna rakas (raju hetki)
John Henry
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