
As a songwriter, performer, and recording artist, Rex Griffin bridged the gap between Jimmie Rodgers and Hank Williams -- indeed, it can be said that he bridged the gap between Rodgers and Buddy Holly, and between Rodgers and the Beatles. Griffin was among the first country music stars to record using his own material almost exclusively, and among the least of his accomplishments, one of his songs was covered (albeit without proper credit) by the Beatles.
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The Last Letter
You Gotta To Go To Work
You Gotta Go To Work
You Got To Go To Work
Everybody's Trying To Be My Baby
Lovesick Blues
The Last Leter
An Old Rose and a Curl
I'm Ready to Reform
That Old Sweetheart of Mine
If You Call That Gone Goodbye
The Last Letter (1937)
Down in Old Alabama
Maybe You'll Think About Me
I Don't Mean to Be Mean
The Trail To Home Sweet Home
Let Me Call You Sweetheart Again
An Old Faded Photograph
The Yodeling Cowboy's Last Song
The Last Love Call Yodel
Just Partners
I'm Crying Inside
Dixieland Sweetheart
Just for Old Time's Sake
Love Call Yodel
Beyond The Last Mile
Blue Eyes Lullaby
Mean Woman Blues
My Hillbilly Baby
I'll Never Tell You That I Love You
I Love You as Before
Over The River
I Lost Again
Nobody Wants To Be My Baby
Too Good To Be True
I'm Free As The Breeze
The Walkin' Blues
Answer to "The Last Letter"
A Thousand Times or More
How Can I Be Sure
Toodle-Oo Sweet Mama
I'm Just Passin' Through
I Don't Love Anybody But You
Sweet Mama, Hurry Home
Why Should I Care If You're Blue
Blue Eyes Lullaby (1935)
How Can I Be Sure?
Yum Yum Blues
Sittin' On the Old Settee
Mean Woman Blues (1935)
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