Happy hour is the practice of offering reduced prices (usually alcoholic beverages) for a specified period of time. Happy Hour, a 1974 album by Tony Booth. Happy Hour (Humans album), 1981. Happy Hour, a 1981 album by Eumir Deodato. Happy Hour (Ted Hawkins album), 1985. Happy Hour (Morrissey–Mullen album), 1988. Happy Hour (King Missile album), 1992. Happy Hour (Youth Brigade album), 1994. Happy Hour (N-Trance album), 1998. Happy Hour (Shonen Knife album), 1998. Happy Hour (Bob & Tom album), 2005.
Ted Hawkins - The Final Tour (1998). World, & Country. Tracks 17-19 recorded live on October 8, 1994 at The Pres House on the campus of the University of Wisconsin at Madison Track 20 recorded live on July 8, 1994 at Goochi's, Wenatchee, WA. Expand. Songs in album Ted Hawkins - The Final Tour (1998).
Ted Hawkins (born October 28, 1936, Biloxi, Mississippi, USA -died January 1, 1995, Los Angeles, California, USA) was an American blues and soul-blues singer and guitarist. For the American mandolinist, please use Ted Hawkins (2).
Ted Hawkins (October 28, 1936 – January 1, 1995) was an American singer-songwriter. He was born in Biloxi, Mississippi, United States.
3. Who Got My Natural Comb? Ted Hawkins. 5. Sorry You're Sick. Steve Gillette, Dave Mackechnie.
Haddaway - What Is Love. Hozier Take Me to Church.
It would be sweet to report that when Ted Hawkins moved to Los Angeles in 1966 there was some interest in his music. There certainly could have been, for while white American musicians were tripping their brains out, Jimi Hendrix was starting to reinvent the blues. And in England, groups like Cream were re-recording classic black American blues. Alas, it was not to be. Ted Hawkins spent decades as a busker, playing for donations on the boardwalk at Venice Beach. This did not provide an adequate income. Crime did. And so he spent more years in jail
This is, in fact, a simple repackaging of two earlier Hawkins albums, the live The Unstoppable Ted Hawkins and the studio Nowhere to Run (aka I Love You Too) - especially baffling since both are in print. There are no bonus tracks, in fact nothing fresh at all - none of which stops this from being great music, since Hawkins was a lively and vital performer. His guitar technique might have been basic but it was effective, and his soulful voice could melt the iciest heart, as the live album shows only too well. But most Hawkins-philes will already have both discs.