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  1. 1996 Peter Keane’s WalkinAround (Rounder/Flying Fish) 2002 Karaugh Brown's One Round Orange (One Room Records) ARTISTS WHO HAVE SUNG HIS SONGS (click through to the artist websites for more information)

  2. Bill Morrissey (re-recording for CD of original album, 1991) Produced by Bill Morrissey and Ellen Karas Philo / PH 1105 . Barstow Small Town on the River ... Walkin' Around (1996) Rounder/Flying Fish / FF 652 As Songwriter: Peter Keane I Wonder If I'll Ever Leave (co-written with LeRoy Preston)

  3. BILL MORRISSEY SINGS LIVE RECORDED OFF SOUNDBOARDS FROM CONCERTS (click through to listen to the concerts) 1989 Live in Cambridge, Mass. 1990 Live in Northampton, Mass. ... on his Walkin' Around album (Flying Fish, 1996) Cormac McCarthy released "Marigold Hall" (co-written with Cormac McCarthy) on his Picture Gallery Blues album, (Green Linnet ...

  4. 29 de jul. de 2011 · A private memorial service took place in New Hampshire on Friday, July 29, for Bill Morrissey, a Grammy-nominated, nationally touring folksinger-songwriter, for whom the granite state was home and its small-town life the inspiration behind much of his material. Morrissey died at age 59 of complications of heart disease in Georgia on July 23 while on tour. [To read the full article, click on ...

  5. 28 de dic. de 2017 · The glum, symphonic “You Have Killed Me” finds Morrissey disappointed (once again) when he attempts to relate to another person. Things go south and Moz is devastated (“Yes, I walk around ...

  6. 15 de ago. de 2020 · So quiet on this winter’s night, not a house-light on for miles around. Then he said, “I think I’ll fill the stove, it’s getting time for bed”. She looked up, “I think I’ll have some wine. How ’bout you?” she asked, and he declined. “Warren,” she said, “Maybe just for tonight, let’s fill the stove with birches.

  7. 23 de ene. de 2024 · “Night Shift” was probably the first song I ever heard Bill Morrissey sing, the first time I went to hear him at the Idler in Harvard Square. It was around 1981, and he typically used this semi-autobiographical picture of dead-end life in a fading northern mill town to open his first set.