Don't Rock the Jukebox - Alan Jackson - MP3 instrumental karaoke

This title is a cover of Don't Rock the Jukebox as made famous by Alan Jackson

Don't Rock the Jukebox - Alan Jackson - Instrumental MP3 Karaoke Download

Tempo: variable (around 146 BPM)

In the same key as the original: G

This song ends without fade out

Duration: 02:57 - Preview at: 02:17

Instrumental Version MP3

With backing vocals
Key
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Instrumental Version MP3

Without backing vocals
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Cover Version MP3

A singer performs the lead vocal
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These music files do not include lyrics. Download the karaoke with lyrics.

About

Release date: 1991
Format: MP3 320 Kbps
Genres: Country, In English
Original songwriters: Alan Jackson, Roger Alan Murrah, Keith Stegall

All files available for download are reproduced tracks, they're not the original music.

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Don’t Rock the Jukebox is a song by American country music artist Alan Jackson. The lyrics mix together some of country music’s most well-worn themes: heartbreak, drinking, and listening to music. The song describes a heartbroken bar patron who seeks to alleviate his sorrows by listening to classic country music on the bar jukebox, which he encourages other bar patrons not to “rock” (referring to more modern, rock-influenced music). The song was written by Alan Jackson, Roger Murrah, and Keith Stegall. It was produced by Keith Stegall and Scott Hendricks and serves as the opening track, title track, and lead single to Alan Jackson’s 1991 album Don’t Rock the Jukebox. The single was a commercial success for Jackson, reaching Number 1 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart, and over the years becoming one of his signature songs. In 1992, Don’t Rock the Jukebox also received an ASCAP award for Country Song of the Year.

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6 comments
  • 1 year ago
    • has rated this track
    perfect
  • 4 years ago
    • has rated this track
    Brilliant catchy beat
  • Greg_Ledder 6 years ago
    A cracking country rocker of a track - love using it. Highly recommended - and a great suggestion by Jazzbo about the steel guitar. :-)
  • 7 years ago
    • has rated this track
    Love this version
  • 7 years ago
    • has rated this track
    One of best!
  • 9 years ago
    • has rated this track
    This is a great country rocker, but I have one small suggestion: insert a lap steel guitar instead of the electric guitar after the 16-bar instrumental, where the lyric is, "Now I ain't got nothin’, against rock and roll, But when your heart's been broken, you need a song that's slow. There ain't nothin' like a steel guitar to drown a memory." The original has a steel guitar here. If you sing about one, you should hear it.