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Nat Stuckey - All My Tomorrows (2018) [Hi-Res]

Nat Stuckey - All My Tomorrows (2018) [Hi-Res]

BAND/ARTIST: Nat Stuckey

  • Title: All My Tomorrows
  • Year Of Release: 1967 / 2018
  • Label: Paula Records
  • Genre: Country
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks) [96kHz/24bit]
  • Total Time: 31:11 min
  • Total Size: 563 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Waiting In Your Welfare Line (1:57)
02. All My Good Times Are Gone (2:24)
03. You're Putting Me On (2:00)
04. Will's Crossing (3:02)
05. Anywhere I Am (2:31)
06. All My Tomorrows (3:25)
07. Adorable Women (1:27)
08. Walk Through This World (3:08)
09. I Knew Her When (2:32)
10. Social Obligations (2:34)
11. I Can't Stop Loving You (4:04)
12. There's A Lot More (Where That Came From) (2:08)

Country songwriter and recording artist Nat Stuckey originally worked as a DJ before forming his first country band in the late '50s and becoming a regular on the Louisiana Hayride show. It was during this time that he was signed to the Paula label out of Shreveport, LA, and scored a minor hit with 1966's "Sweet Thang." His next hit came as a songwriter, however, when Buck Owens recorded "Waitin' In Your Welfare Line." Stuckey profited from the publishing royalties, and followed up with another big hit, writing "Pop a Top" as recorded by Jim Ed Brown. He recorded a few other hits such as 1968's "Plastic Saddle" and "Sweet Thang and Cisco," but he became known more as a songwriter than a performer in his own right. Stuckey later worked in commercials. -- Steve Kurutz


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  • Ann M. Stuckey
  •  wrote in 19:02
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I am obligated to re-write some of Steve Kurutz biographical information on Nat Stuckey. When Nat was a radio announcer on Radio Station KWKH, Shreveport, LA, he wrote "Waitin In Your Welfare Line", to which Buck Owens and Don Rich added a line, Buck recorded, and it was No. 1 in Billboard for seven weeks. Then Nat recorded "Sweet Thang' for Paula Records in 1966 which went to No. 4 in Billboard. Nat's next single was to be "Pop A Top", but he gave the song to Jim Ed Brown to record on RCA Records. Nat left KWKH, moved to Nashville, signed with RCA Records for seven years, then to MCA Records with Conway Twitty and David Barnes producing. Later he recorded to Kristal International. Nat recorded over 20 albums, had over 40 single releases. He was writer or co-writer on over 50 songs, one of them being "Diggin' Up Bones". He was the voice in many commercial such as United Airlines, Coca Cola (he wrote two commercials), Case Tractor and the last Spuds MacKenzie for Budweiser. He died August 24, 1988. Please note that Alan Jackson re-recorded "Pop A Top", revitalizing the career of Jim Ed Brown and making a lot of folks happy. I am the widow of Nat Stuckey. These are the facts. You don't have to believe he was the greatest country singer, but I believe it.
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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 20:06
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