Lefty Frizzell - Look What Thoughts Will Do (34 tracks) +Album Reviews swapacd.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from swapacd.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
UNDERWOOD Falkirk Mine worker Daniel Saxberg was eating lunch with his kids at Space Aliens in Bismarck when a co-worker texted him the news that Coal Creek Station will soon have a new owner.
âI literally almost cried and hugged my waitress at the same time,â he said. âItâs been an emotional year to say the least.â
He recalled the scene at the restaurant from his home in Underwood the next day.
Saxberg smiled Thursday as he spoke about how he wonât be out of his job working in mine reclamation next year after all, given that the power plant is to stay open. Falkirk supplies coal to Coal Creek via enormous trucks that haul loads of lignite several miles from the mine near Underwood to the power plant south of town.
Kitty Wells
It Wasn t God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels
Release Me
Searching (For Someone Like You)
I Can t Stop Loving You
Mommy For A Day
You Don t Hear
Re-Release Date: 6/4/2002
hyperbolium (4 out of 5 stars) As the first real female star of country music, Wells holds a special place in both its hit-making history, and as a primary influence on the female voices that followed in her footsteps. Her first hit, 1952 s It Wasn t God Who Made Honky-Tonk Angels, not only provided a lyrical rebuff to Hank Thompson s The Wild Side of Life, but staked out a feminist viewpoint that had never been heard in country music before. Her other answer songs, and hits like 1959 s Mommy for a Day (written by Harlan Howard and Buck Owens) found their voice in Kitty Wells, detailing the emotional travails of a woman s life, and opening the door for Loretta Lynn, Tammy Wynette and others.
By: Andrew Moran
Have rumors of coal’s death been greatly exaggerated? For years, it had been reported that Coal Country was on the brink of devastation as markets worldwide, including China, had been transitioning from the energy material and into greener alternatives, like natural gas and renewables. However, in the post-pandemic economy, it might be a matter of what is old is new again, with a growing number of nations depending on the rock for their energy needs. Is the treasured Christmas gift making a comeback, or is it a temporary substitute until the commodities supercycle subsides and international commerce stabilizes? Gift givers might put that lump of coal back as stocking stuffers this year.