 | Ghost Riders in the Sky - The outlaws
Tags: Ghost, in, Outlaws, riders, sky, Spiderbait, the
Description: if u loved the spiderbait version, i'm sure you'll love the outlaws.
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 | Ghost Riders in the Sky - Spiderbait
Tags: Ghost, Playstation, PS2, Rider, Spiderbait
Description: New music video of Spiderbaits, "Ghost Riders in the sky" with footage from the movie and PS2 game. "LETS RIDE."
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 | Ghost Rider - Ghost Riders In The Sky ( Spiderbait - Cage )
Tags: cage, comic, comics, devil, fire, forsaken, Ghost, ghostrider, marvel, music, nicolas, Rider, spiderbait, video
Description: Ghost Rider - ( Nicolas Cage / Spiderbait / Music Video )
Fan Made Music Video
Music, Movie, and all that jazz owned by: Marvel, Spiderbait, Sony, Columbia Pictures and abunch of other people I'm sure...
Editing Done By ... ME!!! :D
No copyright infringments intended.
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 | Ghost Riders In the Sky By: Frankie Laine
Tags: frankie, Ghost, in, lane, riders, sky, the
Description: this is the song ghost riders in the sky by Frankie Laine with clips form the ghost rider movie. program used to make video: cyberlink power director. hope u like it and enjoy.and please leave comments please. I do not own the rights to the movie or the song nor do i have anything to do with the movie or the song
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 | Johnny Cash - Ghost Riders In The Sky
Tags: Cash, Ghost, Johnny, Riders, Sky
Description: Johnny Cash - Ghost Riders In The Sky
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 | Ghost Riders In The Sky - Vaughn Monroe
Tags: Ghost, In, Monroe, Riders, Sky, The, Vaughn
Description: Uma homenagem ao meu saudoso avô, que adorava esta música do
Vaughn Monroe.
In honor of my grandfather's memory, who loved this song by Vaughn Monroe.
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 | Ghost Rider - Ghost Riders in the sky (Spiderbait)
Tags: Ghost, GhostRider, GhostRiders, Marvel, NicholasCage, Rider, Spiderbait
Description: The Movie Ghost Rider set to the song 'Ghost Riders' performed by Spiderbait, ENJOY!!
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 | VAUGHN MONROE-GHOST RIDERS IN THE SKY
Tags: 1949, country, Monroe, music, Vaughn
Description: Vaughn Monroe
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
• Ten things you may not know about Wikipedia •Jump to: navigation, search
Vaughn Monroe
Born October 7, 1911(1911-10-07), Akron, Ohio, United States
Died May 21, 1973 (aged 61), Stuart, Florida, United States
Genre(s) Big band, Traditional Pop
Years active 1940-1963
Label(s) RCA Victor
Website Vaughn Monroe Big Band Era Singer
Vaughn Monroe (October 7, 1911 -- May 21, 1973) was an American singer, trumpeter and big band leader, most popular in the 1940s and 1950s. Monroe was born in Akron, Ohio and graduated from Jeannette High School in Pennsylvania in 1929[1]. He formed a band in Boston in 1940 and became its principal vocalist. He also wrote a number of songs ranging from "Army Song" to less known ones like the "Jeannette High School Alma Mater" [2]
In the 1940s, Monroe built The Meadows, a restaurant/nightclub on Route 9 in Framingham, Massachusetts, west of Boston. He broadcast his "Camel (cigarette) Caravan" radio program from there starting in 1946. It burned to the ground in December, 1980.
He recorded extensively for RCA Victor until the 1950s and his signature tune was "Racing with the Moon" (1941). Among his other hits were "There I Go" (1941), "There I've Said It Again" (1945), "Let It Snow, Let It Snow, Let It Snow" (1946), "Ballerina" (1947), "Ghost Riders in the Sky" (1949), "Someday (You'll Want Me To Want You)" (1949), and "Sound Off" (1951). One lost opportunity - he turned down the chance to record "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer".
He was tall and handsome which helped him as a band leader and singer, as well as in Hollywood, although he did not pursue a movie and television career with vigor. He was sometimes called 'the baritone with muscles'.
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 | Ghost Riders In The Sky
Tags: Autry, Buck, Classic, Country, Gene, Norris
Description: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HfY-snTvUcw&fmt=18
Buck Norris sings "Ghost Riders In The Sky" sung originally by Gene Autry and also a big hit by Johnny Cash.
His first recordings had just been released when his mother, who'd been ill for months, died at the age of 45, apparently of cancer. Autry's father began drifting away soon afterward, and he became the head of the family and the main supporter of himself, two sisters, and a younger brother. In early December of 1929, Autry cut his first six sides for ARC. The music was a mix of hillbilly, blues, country, yodel songs, and cowboy ballads. His breakthrough record, "That Silver-Haired Daddy of Mine," co-written by Autry and his friend Jimmy Long one night at the railroad depot, was released in 1931. The song sold 30,000 copies within a month, and by the end of a year 500,000 had been sold, an occasion that American Records decided to mark with the public presentation of a gold-plated copy of the record. Autry received a second gold record when sales later broke one million. And that was where the notion of the Gold Record Award was born. The record also led him into a new career on the radio as Oklahoma's Yodeling Cowboy on the National Barn Dance show sponsored by WLS out of Chicago. It was there that Autry became a major national star -- his record sales rose assisted by his exposure on radio.
During the early years of his career, Autry took a number of important collaborators and musicians aboard. Among them were Fred Rose, the songwriter (later responsible for "Your Cheatin' Heart") with whom he collaborated on many of his hits, and fiddle player Carl Cotner (who also played sax, clarinet, and piano), who became his arranger. Autry had a knack for knowing a good song when he heard it (though he almost passed on the biggest hit of his career), and for knowing when a song needed something extra in its arrangement, but it was Cotner who was able to translate his sensibilities into musical notes and arrangements. Mary Ford, later of Les Paul fame, was in Autry's band at one time, and in 1936 Autry signed up a 17-year-old guitar player named Merle Travis, the future country star and songwriter.
By the early '30s, Autry became one of the most beloved singers in country & western music. By 1933, he was getting fan letters by the hundreds every week, and his record sales were only going up. Autry's career might've been made right there, but fate intervened again that year, in the form of the movie business. The Western -- especially the B Western, the bottom-of-the-bill, low-budget action oater -- had been hit very hard by the coming of sound in the years 1927 to 1929. Audiences expected dialogue in their movies, and most Western stars up to that time were a lot better at riding, roping, and shooting than reading lines. Not only did producers and directors need something to fill up the soundtracks of their movies, especially on the limited budgets of the B Westerns, but something to substitute for violent action, which was being increasingly criticized by citizen groups.
Cowboy star Ken Maynard, who was a great trick rider and stuntman but no singer, had tried singing songs in a few of his movies, and the producers noticed that the songs had gone over well despite his vocal limitations. Maynard was making another Western, In Old Santa Fe (1934), for Mascot Pictures, and producer Nat Levine decided to try an experiment, putting in a musical number sung by a professional. By sheer chance, the American Record Company and Mascot Pictures were locked together financially, though indirectly, and with the help from the president of ARC, Levine was steered toward Autry.
A phone call brought the young singer and another ARC performer -- multi-instrumentalist/comedian Smiley Burnette -- out to Hollywood, where, after a quick meeting and screen test, the two were put into In Old Santa Fe. Autry had only one scene, singing a song and calling a square dance, but that scene proved to be one of the most popular parts of the movie.
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 | Ghost Riders In The Sky
Tags: Band, BCB, Cash, City, Johnny, Oklahoma
Description: BCB Band sings Ghost Riders In The Sky which was originally performed by Gene Autry and by Johnny Cash as well as many others.
"(Ghost) Riders in the Sky: A Cowboy Legend" is a country and cowboy-style song. It was written on June 5, 1948 by Stan Jones. A number of versions were also crossover hits on the pop charts in 1949. It has been called by many the "best country/western song ever."
The song is about a cowboy who has a vision of red-eyed, fire-breathing cattle thundering across the sky, being chased by the ghosts of damned cowboys. One warns him that if he does not change his ways he will be doomed to join them, forever "trying to catch the Devil's herd across the endless skies." The song's story seems to have a marked resemblance to the northern European mythic Wild Hunt.
More than fifty different artists have recorded versions of this classic. Charting versions were recorded by Vaughn Monroe (with orchestra and vocal quartet), by Bing Crosby (with the Ken Darby Singers), Marty Robbins and by Johnny Cash. Other contemporary versions were recorded by Peggy Lee (with the Jud Conlon Singers), and by Spike Jones and his City Slickers, with the most recent version of the song being performed by Spiderbait, for the 2007 movie Ghost Rider. Gene Autry sang the song in his 1949 movie, "Riders in the Sky".
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 | Marty Robbins Sings 'Ghost Riders In The Sky.'
Tags: Country
Description: A song written by Stan Jones which a lot of people would regard as the greatest cowboy/western song ever written. It is a stunning song and even when it's done as an instrumental it never seems to lose any of it's appeal. Without wishing to name drop, I actually asked Marty Robbins when he was in the UK in the 70's why he hadn't recorded 'Ghost Riders.' He told me he had recorded it but it hadn't come out as well as he would have liked and so it had stayed in the 'can.' He never saw it released and I believe I'm right in saying that it made it's debut on his great 'Long Long Ago' album which came out shortly after his death. Stan Jones by the way, never wrote another song of any note apart from a song called 'Ride Away' from John Wayne's 'The Searchers.' I don't suppose it mattered as the song must have made him a fortune and create an old age pension a lot of us would have liked!
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