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Awol A Real Mamas Boy 1973 Direct

Awol A Real Mamas Boy 1973 Direct

It is possible the query is a conflation of two different things:

Consider a hypothetical scene: A grizzled Sergeant confronts a young deserter. "You went AWOL, you know that? AWOL to go cry to your momma. You're a real mama's boy, you know that?" Without a script in hand, a memory from 1973 could easily be compressed into the search string "awol a real mamas boy 1973." Some users on film forums have speculated this might come from an episode of M A S H* (which aired from 1972-1983) or the obscure Vietnam film Heroes (1977). awol a real mamas boy 1973

The result was ten tracks recorded at a flea market studio in Muscle Shoals over three manic days. And then… nothing. The master tape vanished. Virgil Ransom disappeared. Only a single promotional copy of AWOL: A Real Mama’s Boy has ever surfaced, changing hands among private collectors for sums that would make a major label weep. It is possible the query is a conflation

Album analysis and historical context.

To understand “AWOL: A Real Mama’s Boy,” one must first understand the climate of 1973. The Vietnam War was technically “winding down” for the U.S. after the Paris Peace Accords in January, but American POWs were still coming home, and the draft had ended just a year earlier. The term (Absent Without Official Leave) carried immense weight. It was not just a military crime; it was a statement. Going AWOL in 1973 meant rejecting a system that had sent 58,000 Americans to die in a jungle for reasons no one could convincingly explain. You're a real mama's boy, you know that