- Source: Quarter Moon in a Ten Cent Town
Quarter Moon in a Ten Cent Town is the fifth studio album by American country music artist Emmylou Harris, released in 1978. The album reached number 3 on the Billboard charts, with three charting singles: "To Daddy" (written by Dolly Parton) at #3, "Two More Bottles of Wine" at #1 (the third #1 of Harris' career), and "Easy From Now On" (co-written by Carlene Carter, and Susanna Clark and the song from which the album's title comes) at #12. Also featured are "One Paper Kid", a duet with Willie Nelson, "Leaving Louisiana in the Broad Daylight", which the Oak Ridge Boys would reach #1 with in 1980 and "I Ain't Living Long Like This", which Waylon Jennings would reach #1 with in 1980 as well. The painting used for the album cover is by Susanna Clark.
At the 21st Annual Grammy Awards, the album was nominated for Best Female Country Vocal Performance but the award went to Dolly Parton for the Here You Come Again album.
Track listing
Personnel
Brian Ahern - acoustic guitar, 12-string guitar, gut-String guitar, percussion, baby bottle
Dianne Brooks - backing vocals
James Burton - electric guitar
Rodney Crowell - acoustic guitar, electric guitar
Rick Danko - fiddle, backing vocals
Hank DeVito - pedal steel
Emory Gordy Jr. - bass
Glen Hardin - piano, electric piano, string arrangements
Emmylou Harris - vocals, acoustic guitar
Garth Hudson - accordion, baritone saxophone
Nicolette Larson - backing vocals
Albert Lee - acoustic guitar, electric guitar, piano, mandolin
Willie Nelson - duet vocals
Mickey Raphael - harmonica
Ricky Skaggs - fiddle, viola
John Ware - drums, percussion
Technical
Brian Ahern - Producer, Engineer
Donivan Cowart - Engineer
Bradley Hartman - Engineer
Michael Hollyfield - design
Ed Thrasher - photography
Release history
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Quarter Moon in a Ten Cent Town
- Emmylou Harris
- Easy From Now On
- Profile: Best of Emmylou Harris
- Two More Bottles of Wine
- Leaving Louisiana in the Broad Daylight
- I Ain't Living Long Like This
- Spyboy (album)
- To Daddy
- Susanna Clark