Stock Music track: Country Boy

Rowdy, fun country song about preferring a southern boy to a city boy-think Gretchen Wilson or Miranda Lambert.

Shockwave-Sound.com T16993 39.95 39.95

Track details

Track ID number: 16993
Genres: Vocal Rock music - Royalty free vocal rock music -- Vocal Country Music -- Blues & Southern Rock
Moods/Emotions: Ironic / Spiteful / Bad Attitude -- Strong / Confident / Tough -- Happy / Joyful / Positive -- Passionate / Emotional / Melodramatic
Suggested Production Types: Men / Motors / Guys stuff
Prominent Instruments: Bass (Electric) -- Drums (Drum Kit) -- Guitar (Electric) -- Vocals (Female) / Singing with Lyrics
Keywords / Hints: rowdy, tough, southern, proud, confident, attraction, sensual, miranda lambert, gretchen wilson, carrie underwood
Tempo feel: Medium
Tempo Beats Per Minute: 92
Artist: Dave Tough Band
Composer: Dave Tough (BMI - CAE#: 499.731.594)
Publisher: Tough Daddy Publishing (BMI)
SRCO (Sound Recording Copyright Owner): Dave Tough
PRO / Non-PRO Track? PRO (What's this?)
WAV file bit depth: CD-quality / 16-bit (What's this?)
Stem files available for this track: No
Lyrics: It’s the age old dilema, how’s a girl to choose,
‘Tween hot, country lovin or city boy moves?
Girls lets be honest, ain’t much of a choice
We love them backwoods, down home, country boys

Dancin’ with my girls in the honky tonk
Met a country boy at the old juke box
Cowboy hat and darin’ eyes
Two steps away from love at first sight

City boys break your heart
When it comes romance
So just give that good ol’ country boy a chance

A country boy is what I need
A country boy in those tight wrangler jeans
A country boy he’s the real mccoy
It’s time you discover
I want nothin’ other
Than a corn-fed country boy

Don’t need a white collar I gotta chase around
I need a real redneck from a blue-collar town
Don’t need a BMW, a fancy bouquet
I need cowboy boots and a bail of hay

Save your fancy suits, your smelly hair jelly
Gimmie collard greens and fresh pork belly
He’ll take his time, he’s the real McCoy
He’s a backwoods, home grown, country boy

Repeat Chorus
Solo
Breakdown-“Cowboy come and get me”
Repeat Chorus
Album containing this track: (None)
About the Artist
Dave Tough Band Dave Tough Band

Dave Tough is a Nashville-based producer, engineer, songwriter and music industry educator. He has written and produced several songs for major motion pictures and television. Most recently in 2012 he had 9 placements in the television show "Hart of Dixie" and had over 10 placements in the CW television series "Remodeled". In 2011, his song "Falling" was featured in Seth Rogen's "Observe and Report" . Other songs have been featured in training films and commercials, including a Pantene shampoo ad series.

Dave has had cuts with several independent and label country and pop artists (and is an active voting member of the The Recording Academy (Grammy Awards). He is a member of the duo "Xavier & Ophelia" with co-creator DeAnna Moore.

As a songwriter Dave has been a top finalist in many songwriting contests and he won the Grand Prize Country Category in the 2009 John Lennon Songwriting Contest.
As an engineer and producer, Dave has produced, engineered demos and master recordings for hundreds of artists worldwide over the internet.

Dr. Tough is an audio professor at Belmont University in Nashville, TN teaching audio recording and studio production. He has worked and studied under engineering names such as Bruce Swedien and Neil Citron. He has worked on the business side of the industry for Capitol Records, Warner Chappell Music, BMG Music Publishing and Capitol/EMI.
As an solo artist, Tough has released two solo albums Gravity Always Wins (2005) and I'm Right Here (1999). Tough has been recording and songwriting educator at UCLA, Cal Poly University, the University of North Alabama and most recently, Belmont University's Mike Curb College.

Dave Tough shares his namesake with the famous jazz drummer (Tough's great uncle) who played with the likes of Woody Herman, Benny Goodman and Tommy Dorsey.

Said Dave: "I enjoy making a living making music as there is something always new to learn. If you know one instrument, you can learn another. If you know how to engineer one style, you can always learn another. My main question I ask myself when writing and making music is "what gives you goosebumps". The mechanics of songwriting and engineering can get quite technical, however at the end of the day its what makes you feel something."