Artist's albums
Nat Stuckey: Pop A Top
1998 · album
Is it Any Wonder that I Love You
1972 · album
Old Man Willis
1970 · album
Forgive Me for Calling You Darling
1972 · album
Only a Woman Like You
1971 · album
She Wakes Me With a Kiss Every Morning
1971 · album
Sunday Morning with Nat Stuckey and Connie Smith
1970 · album
Country Fever
1970 · album
The Music Row Revival Sessions
2023 · album
Loving You
2022 · EP
American Portraits: Nat Stuckey
2020 · album
Two Together
2020 · EP
Pop a Top
2013 · album
Words and Music By Nat Stuckey and Friends
2012 · album
Nat Stuckey - His Very Best
2008 · album
Nat Stuckey: Studio 102 Essentials
2008 · album
The Best Of Nat Stuckey
2007 · album
The Very Best of Nat Stuckey
2006 · compilation
Take Time To Love Her / I Used It All On You
1973 · album
New Country Roads
1969 · album
Leave This One Alone
1968 · single
Nat Stuckey Sings
1968 · album
Keep 'Em Country
1969 · album
Stuckey Style
1969 · album
Young Love
1969 · album
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Biography
Country songwriter and recording artist Nat Stuckey originally worked as a DJ before forming his first country band in the late '50s and becoming a regular on the Louisiana Hayride show. It was during this time that he was signed to the Paula label out of Shreveport, LA, and scored a minor hit with 1966's "Sweet Thang." His next hit came as a songwriter, however, when Buck Owens recorded "Waitin' In Your Welfare Line." Stuckey profited from the publishing royalties, and followed up with another big hit, writing "Pop a Top" as recorded by Jim Ed Brown. He recorded a few other hits such as 1968's "Plastic Saddle" and "Sweet Thang and Cisco," but he became known more as a songwriter than a performer in his own right. Stuckey later worked in commercials. ~ Steve Kurutz, Rovi