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  1. Webb Pierce recording. In August 1952, Webb Pierce released his version. Pierce's song was his third straight number-one single on the C&W Best Seller charts, where it stayed at number one for two weeks. Answer record In 1953, ...

  2. 7 de oct. de 2014 · C&W (1976) Holiday for Love (2009) AllMusic Review. User Reviews. Track Listing. Credits. Releases. Similar Albums. Moods and Themes. ... The Complete U.S. Country Hits 1952-1962 by Webb Pierce released in 2014. Find album reviews, track lists, credits, awards and more at AllMusic.

  3. 1 de ago. de 2021 · C&W (1976) Holiday for Love (2009) User Reviews. Track Listing. Credits. Releases. Similar Albums. Submit Corrections. Add to Custom List Add to Collection ... Golden Hits, Vol. 1 by Webb Pierce released in 2021. Find album reviews, track lists, credits, awards and more at AllMusic.

  4. C&W (1976) Holiday for Love (2009) AllMusic Review. User Reviews. Track Listing. Credits. Releases. Similar Albums. Submit Corrections. Add to Custom List ... Bound for the Kingdom by Webb Pierce released in 1959. Find album reviews, track lists, credits, awards and more at AllMusic.

  5. Just so I'll be the last. Now I don't care if I'm not the first love you've known. Just so I'll be the last. Now I don't care if I'm not the first one you've kissed. Darling, I'll never ask. Yesterday's gone. Just love me from now on. Forsaking all others and the past. For I don't care if I'm not the first love you've known.

  6. 4 de feb. de 2022 · C & W (feat. Webb Pierce) Carol Channing. About Webb Pierce. Webb Pierce's 1953 hit "There Stands the Glass"--a classic country drinkin' song with a sweet, tumbling-tumbleweed melody--was banned from many U.S. radio stations because of its subject matter, a fact that attests to the authenticity of the late honky tonker's ...

  7. Pierce's song was his third straight number one single on the C&W Best Seller charts, where it stayed at number one for two weeks. The song was first offered to Hank Williams, then the undisputed "King" of country music. He was singing it on his early morning radio shows and that's how Webb Pierce first heard it.