The Good Ol' Boys — Alive and Well
Appearance
The Good Ol' Boys — Alive & Well | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by Moe Bandy & Joe Stampley | ||||
Released | 1984 | |||
Genre | Country | |||
Label | Columbia | |||
Producer | Blake Mevis | |||
Moe Bandy & Joe Stampley chronology | ||||
| ||||
Singles from The Good Ol' Boys - Alive & Well | ||||
|
The Good Ol Boys - Alive & Well is an album by American country singers Moe Bandy and Joe Stampley, released in 1984 on Columbia Records.[1][2] Included on the album is the duo's single "Where's the Dress", a satire of the pop band Culture Club.[3]
Track listing
- "Where's the Dress" (T. Stampley/B. Lindsey/G. Cummings) - 2:50
- style parody of "Karma Chameleon" by Culture Club
- "He's Back In Texas" (T. Seals/W. Newton) - 2:27
- "Honky Tonk Money" (M. Garvin/R. Hellard/B. Jones) - 2:30
- "Wild And Crazy Guys" (B. Lindsey/J. Carter/O. J. Christopher) - 2:39
- "We've Got Our Moe-Joe Working" (P. Foster) - 2:56
- "The Boy's Night Out" (J. Stampley/T. Stampley/D. Rosson) - 2:42
- "Daddy's Honky Tonk" (B. Keel/B. Moore) - 2:34
- "Wildlife Sanctuary" (B. Gallimore/B. Mevis/B. Shore/D. Wills) - 2:16
- "Alive And Well" (T. Stampley/D. Rosson/S. McComb) - 2:16
- "Still On A Roll" (J. Greenbaum/B. Hobbs/B. Mevis) - 2:56
Musicians
- Sonny Garrish - Steel guitar
- Fred Newell - Lead guitar
- Brent Rowan - Lead guitar
- Bobby Thompson - Rhythm guitar
- Chip Young - Rhythm guitar
- Larry Paxton - Bass guitar
- Bob Wray - Bass guitar
- Curtis Young - Backing Vocals
- Gary Prim - Keyboards
- Bobby Ogdin - Keyboards
- Jerry Kroon - Drums
- Rob Hajacos - Fiddle
- Terry McMillan - Harmonica
Personnel
- Bill Harris - Engineer
- Doug Crider - Asst. Engineer
- Mark Tucker - Photography
- Bill Johnson & Jeff Morris - Art direction
References
- ^ "The Good Ol' Boys, Alive and Well". Winnipeg Free Press. 21 July 1984. p. 18.
- ^ Edwards, Joe (4 Aug 1984). "Videos can be a drag for country music duo". The Globe and Mail. p. E11.
- ^ "How Moe Bandy's Cheating, Drinking Songs Made Him Country's Tragic Clown". Rolling Stone Country. February 1, 2018. Retrieved June 12, 2021.