I'm Sorry for You My Friend explained
I'm Sorry for You My Friend is an album by the American musician Moe Bandy, released in 1977 on the Columbia label.[1] [2] It was recorded at Columbia Recording Studio "B". The album peaked at No. 18 on Billboards Top Country Albums chart.[3] The title track is a cover of the Hank Williams song.[4]
The track "Does Fort Worth Ever Cross Your Mind" would become a No. 1 hit for George Strait in 1984.
Track listing
- "I'm Sorry for You, My Friend" (H. Williams) - 2:22
- "Someone That I Can Forget" (L. Hargrove/P. Drake) - 2:28
- "The Lady from the Country (Of Eleven Hundred Springs)" (J. Jay/B. Evans) - 2:08
- "So Much for You, So Much for Me" (L. Anderson) - 2:23
- "All the Beer and All My Friends Are Gone" (B. Anderson/M. L. Turner) - 2:39
- "A Four Letter Fool" (K. Jean) - 2:20
- "High Inflation Blues" (S. Collom) - 1:55
- "Does Fort Worth Ever Cross Your Mind" (S. D. Shafer/D. Shafer) - 2:12
- "She's an Angel" (H. Howard/L. J. Dillon) - 1:54
- "She's Everybody's Woman, I'm Nobody's Man" (S. D. Shafer/M. Bandy) - 2:33
Musicians
Backing
- The Jordanaires
- The Nashville Edition
Production
- Sound Engineer - Lou Bradley
- Photography - Jim McGuire
- Design - Bill Barnes, Cheryl Pardue
Notes and References
- News: Hensley . Dennis E. . Country Boy . The Star Press . Dec 18, 1977 . B9.
- Book: Country Music: The Encyclopedia . 2000 . St. Martin's Press . 28.
- Web site: Moe Bandy . Billboard . 25 March 2024.
- Book: The Hank Williams Reader . 2014 . Oxford University Press . 179.