"So Round, So Firm, So Fully Packed" is a 1947 song by Merle Travis, written by Travis, Eddie Kirk, and Cliffie Stone.
"So Round, So Firm, So Fully Packed" | ||||
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Single by Merle Travis | ||||
B-side | "Sweet Temptaton" | |||
Published | January 8, 1947 (1947-01-08) by American Music, Inc., Hollywood[1] | |||
Released | January 1947 (1947-01)[2] | |||
Recorded | October 19, 1946 (1946-10-19)[3] | |||
Studio | Radio Recorders, Los Angeles | |||
Genre | Hillbilly | |||
Length | 2:59 | |||
Label | Capitol 349 | |||
Songwriter(s) | Merle Travis, Cliffie Stone, Eddie Kirk | |||
Producer(s) | Lee Gillette | |||
Merle Travis singles chronology | ||||
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The song describes a woman through the use of advertising slogans. The slogan "So round, so firm, so fully packed, so free and easy on the draw" was used in the Lucky Strike brand cigarette advertising of the time, first heard in 1944 on the Jack Benny and Your Hit Parade radio programs.[citation needed] "I'd walk a mile" is a slogan for Camel cigarettes. "Just ask the man who owns one" refers to Packard automobiles.[4] "She's got the pause that's so refreshing" is a reference to the Coca-Cola slogan "The Pause that Refreshes".
The song was Travis' second number one on the Folk Juke Box charts, where it stayed at number one for 14 weeks and a total of 21 weeks on the chart.[5]
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: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)Preceded by "Rainbow at Midnight" by Ernest Tubb |
Most Played Juke Box Folk Records number one single by Merle Travis February 8, 1947 |
Succeeded by "New Jolie Blonde (New Pretty Blonde)" by Red Foley |
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