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Good Girls Go To Heaven - Brooks & Dunn



     
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Good Girls Go To Heaven Lyrics


Some girls go to church on Sunday
Live life by the golden rule
You got girls gonna graduate one day
Some become louder from party school
Some they walk the straight and narrow
Some girls, they just don't care
Good girls go to heaven
Bad girls go everywhere
Some girls are into heavy metal
Dance with the devil everywhere they go
Others of 'em cut a rug to the fiddle
Dance to the rhythm of the Cotton Eyed Joe
Some they walk the straight and narrow
Some girls, they just don't care
But good girls go to heaven
Bad girls go everywhere
Miss High Fullutin' likes to sip fine champagne
Prim and proper and drippin' in diamond rings

Little sister wears high heels and blue jeans
A long neck drinkin' certified wild thing
Some they walk the straight and narrow
Some girls, they just don't care
Good girls go to heaven
Bad girls go everywhere
Good girls go to heaven
Bad girls go everywhere

Enjoy the lyrics !!!
Brooks & Dunn were a country music singer-songwriter duo, the most successful in the history of country music. Kix Brooks and Ronnie Dunn debuted as Brooks & Dunn in 1991. They have since won the Vocal Duo Award of the Country Music Association every year between 1992 and 2005, with the exception of 2000 in which Southern Rock duo Montgomery Gentry took the honor. Other notable awards include the CMA Album of the Year award for 1994 and the Entertainer of the Year gong for 1996. As of 2004, the duo had won 19 CMA awards and remain the foremost duo in their genre.

Brooks & Dunn's music covers the full range of modern country music, and their chart-topping hits have included everything from the Ronan Keating-penned ballad "The Long Goodbye," through the Rivers Rutherford-written "Ain't Nothing About You," to the gospel music-influenced "Believe." They are also associated with being pioneers of the line dance craze of the mid-1990s. One of their hits, "Boot Scootin' Boogie" - the video for which was made in Tulsa, Oklahoma - is most emblematic of this style.

Both band members write, sing, and play guitar. One or both artists writes or co-writes a large majority of their material, and self-penned successes include the 2004 smash "Red Dirt Road" which the duo wrote together. Both artists have served as song-writers for other artists too. Ronnie Dunn co-wrote country superstar Toby Keith's song "Don't Leave I Think I Love You" which appeared on his 2003 album Shock'n Y'all. Dunn's vocal performances have tended to be released as radio singles: recent hits "You Can't Take the Honkytonk Out of The Girl," "Red Dirt Road," "It's Getting Better All The Time," "That's What It's All About," "Play Something Country," and "Believe" all feature Ronnie Dunn singing lead vocals.

Brooks & Dunn are renowned for their high-energy stage shows. Recent tours have featured Australian country singer Keith Urban, fellow duo Montgomery Gentry, and successful country newcomer Gretchen Wilson. Their latest Deuces Wild tour of 2005 featured fellow country duo Big and Rich. In 2006, the duo opened for the Rolling Stones at their Omaha, Nebraska show.

The duo's songs have been used by President George W Bush as his official campaign songs in both his election and re-election campaigns. In 2000, the then Texas Governor chose the blue-collar line-dance-friending hit of the mid-1990s, "Hard Workin' Man," and in 2004, the President selected the (pre-9/11) hit patriotic "Only in America." Brooks & Dunn both supported the President's re-election campaign, performing at a Republican rally featuring Laura Bush on the eve of the election.

Their latest album is Hillbilly Deluxe which features the number 1 single "Play Something Country."

On August 10, 2009, the duo issued a statement on their website announcing that they were splitting up after 20 years of making music together. The split is amicable, with a final album forthcoming in September 2009 and a final tour in 2010.



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Brooks & Dunn