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・ Honky Tonk Moon
・ Honky Tonk Myself to Death
・ Honky Tonk Rebels
・ Honky Tonk Sonatas
・ Honky Tonk Song
・ Honky Tonk Stomp
・ Honky Tonk Truth
・ Honky Tonk Women
・ Honky Tonkin'
・ Honky Tonkin' (All Night Long)
・ Honky Tonkin's What I Do Best
・ Honky Tonkin's What I Do Best (song)
・ Honky Tonks and Cheap Motels
・ Honky's Ladder
・ Honky-tonk
Honky-Tonk Man
・ Honky-Tonk Stardust Cowboy
・ Honkyoku
・ Honkytonk Films
・ Honkytonk Homeslice
・ Honkytonk Man
・ Honkytonk Sue
・ Honkytonk U
・ Honkytonk University
・ Honkytonks and Heartaches
・ Honkytonkville
・ Honley
・ Honley High School
・ Honley railway station
・ Honma clan


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Honky-Tonk Man : ウィキペディア英語版
Honky-Tonk Man

"Honky-Tonk Man" is a song co-written and recorded by American country music singer Johnny Horton. It was released in March 1956 as his debut single on Columbia records, reaching number 9 on the U.S. country singles charts. Horton re-released the song six years later, taking it to number 11 on the same chart.
==Song details==
Song-writing credits for "Honky-Tonk Man" have been attributed to Johnny Horton, Howard Hausey and Tillman Franks. In late-1955 Hausey, an aspiring song-writer, went to Shreveport, Louisiana (from where the Louisiana Hayride was broadcast) to pitch three of his songs to Johnny Horton. Horton and his manager, Tillman Franks, liked the up-tempo "Honky-Tonk Man", but before it was recorded a deal was negotiated to include Horton and Franks in the publishing royalties (both of whom may have assisted in re-fashioning the melody).
"Honky-Tonk Man" was recorded on 11 January 1956 at the Bradley Barn Studio in Nashville. Session musicians on the recording were Grady Martin and Harold Bradley, as well as Bill Black (at the time Elvis Presley’s bassist). Soon afterwards "Honky-Tonk Man" was released as a single (Columbia label: 4-21504) paired with another song from the same session, "I'm Ready if You're Willing". Live shows were subsequently arranged to advertise the single, with the band featuring Tillman Franks on bass and Tommy Tomlinson on guitar.
The single was reviewed in ''Billboard'' (10 March 1956). The review commented on "Honky-Tonk Man" in the following terms:
The lyrics of the song are narrated in the first-person (“I'm a honky-tonk man”), describing a life of drinking and dancing with young women in honky-tonk bars; the account suggests a compulsive or addictive quality to the protagonist's lifestyle (“I can’t seem to stop”). The chorus of the song juxtaposes the narrator’s obsessive and exuberant behaviour with what happens when his “money’s all gone” (“I’m on the telephone callin’: ‘hey hey mama, can your daddy come home?’”).

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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