Rusty Draper

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
all for the love of flo 01:50 Tools
Folsom Prison Blues 02:00 Tools
In the Cool, Cool, Cool of the Evening 02:33 Tools
Muleskinner Blues 02:31 Tools
Another 02:04 Tools
I Miss You So 02:33 Tools
Hey Li Lee Li Lee Li 02:33 Tools
Held for Questioning 02:18 Tools
Freight Train 02:18 Tools
Gambler's Guitar 02:35 Tools
Are You Satisfied? 02:35 Tools
In the Middle of the House 01:57 Tools
Hard Hearted Hannah 01:52 Tools
Gamblers Guitar 02:34 Tools
Ramblin' Man 02:32 Tools
Mule Skinner Blues 02:20 Tools
The Shifting, Whispering Sands 02:48 Tools
The Shifting Whispering Sands 02:45 Tools
Shifting Whispering Sands 02:45 Tools
Night Life 02:26 Tools
Seventeen 02:10 Tools
Tiger Lily 02:26 Tools
Tongue Tied over You 02:25 Tools
Pink Cadillac 02:42 Tools
Please Help Me, I'm Falling 02:25 Tools
Let's Go Calypso 02:18 Tools
Tiger Lilly 02:27 Tools
Buzz Buzz Buzz 02:11 Tools
The Yellow Rose of Texas 02:52 Tools
The Train With the Rhumba Beat 02:25 Tools
The Last Frontier 02:30 Tools
September Song 02:30 Tools
Two Little Boys 03:33 Tools
I'm a Ramblin' Man 02:05 Tools
Signed Sealed & Delivered 03:33 Tools
No Help Wanted 02:24 Tools
No Huhu 01:50 Tools
all for the love of flo 01:50 Tools
You Call Everybody Darling 02:20 Tools
Jealous Heart 02:33 Tools
Seven Come Eleven 01:44 Tools
Moon Country 02:35 Tools
The Shifting, Whispering Sands (Digitally Remastered) 02:25 Tools
Gamblin' Gal 02:27 Tools
Blue Skirt Waltz 02:40 Tools
Ten Thousand Years Ago 03:09 Tools
Luck of the Irish 02:39 Tools
Native Dancer 02:45 Tools
Eating Goober Peas 02:39 Tools
Freight Train - Digitally Remastered 02:39 Tools
Buzz, Buzz, Buzz 02:08 Tools
Lighthouse 02:51 Tools
Rock And Roll Ruby 02:51 Tools
Wabash Cannonball 02:51 Tools
Muskrat Ramble 02:45 Tools
In The Middle Of The House - Digitally Remastered 02:39 Tools
The Battle of New Orleans 02:44 Tools
Georgia on My Mind 02:08 Tools
The Ballad of Davy Crockett 02:51 Tools
Knock on Wood 02:08 Tools
When Two Worlds Collide 02:08 Tools
Lazy Bones 02:44 Tools
Hong Kong Blues 01:43 Tools
June, July and August 02:44 Tools
Good Golly 02:08 Tools
Signed, Sealed And Delivered 02:14 Tools
Freight Train (Digitally Remastered) 02:20 Tools
Don't Forget Your Shoes 02:14 Tools
A Little Bit of Western Style 02:00 Tools
Folsom Prison Blues 02:00 Tools
Hip Monkey 02:00 Tools
Angry 02:00 Tools
Wheels 01:43 Tools
In The Middle Of The House (Digitally Remastered) 02:00 Tools
Gambler’s Guitar 02:35 Tools
Good Golly (Pretty Molly) 02:04 Tools
Devil of a Woman 02:35 Tools
Doctor, Lawyer, Indian Chief 02:35 Tools
Freight Train 1957 02:04 Tools
Forty Two 02:00 Tools
If I Had You 02:00 Tools
The Last Frontier (from "Savage wilderness") 02:14 Tools
My Melancholy Baby 02:33 Tools
40s: Empire Central: Held for Questioning 02:21 Tools
Rusty Draper - The Shifting, Whispering Sands 02:44 Tools
No Huhu (Don't Be Mad) 02:33 Tools
In the Cool, Cool, Cool of the Evening 02:33 Tools
Big Mamou 02:35 Tools
Gambler´s Guitar 02:33 Tools
Hello Walls 02:33 Tools
Beggar to a king 02:33 Tools
That's My Doll 02:31 Tools
Muleskinner Blues 02:31 Tools
Peter Rabbit 02:04 Tools
Behind Those Swingin' Doors 02:04 Tools
Mule, You Lazy Mule 02:04 Tools
Shoppin' Around 02:04 Tools
Another 02:04 Tools
Pick me up on your way down 02:33 Tools
I Miss You So 02:33 Tools
Ole Rockin' Chair 02:33 Tools
Hey Li Lee Li Lee Li 02:33 Tools
Rusty Drapper - Gambler's Guitar 02:33 Tools
Are You Satisfied 1955 02:33 Tools
Don't Forget Your Shoes 02:33 Tools
  • 22,123
    plays
  • 5,379
    listners
  • 22123
    top track count

Farrell "Rusty" Draper (January 25, 1923 – March 28, 2003) was an American country and pop singer who achieved his greatest success in the 1950s. Born in Kirksville, Missouri and nicknamed "Rusty" for his red hair, he began performing on his uncle's radio show in Tulsa, Oklahoma in the mid 1930s. Draper moved on to work at radio stations in Des Moines, Iowa—sometimes filling in for sports announcer Ronald Reagan—and in Illinois before settling in California. There he began to sing in local clubs, becoming resident singer at the Rumpus Room in San Francisco. By the early 1950s he had begun appearing on national TV shows including The Ed Sullivan Show (CBS) and Ozark Jubilee (ABC). In 1952, Draper signed to Mercury Records and issued his debut single, "How Could You (Blue Eyes)". The following year, after a national club tour, his cover version of Jim Lowe's "Gambler's Guitar” made #6 on both the country and pop charts, and sold a million copies, and was awarded a gold disc.[1] After a series of less successful follow-ups, he made the national charts again in 1955 with "Seventeen" (#18), "The Shifting, Whispering Sands" (#3) and "Are You Satisfied?" (#11), becoming one of the biggest pop and country crossover stars of the period. In 1956, he returned to the top 20 with "In The Middle Of The House" (#20), followed up by his version of Chas McDevitt’s UK skiffle hit "Freight Train" (#3) Draper also reached the UK Singles Chart with a rendition of "Muleskinner Blues." In 1962, he left Mercury to sign with Monument Records, with diminishing chart success as his style became more old-fashioned. However, he continued to have minor hits in the country charts through the 1960s. He remained a steady concert draw in years to follow, and also appeared in stage musicals and on television. Draper died in Bellevue, Washington at the age of 80. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.