When you get there, I recommend that you search for my 1977 vinyl, Something for Everyone, a collection of all original, totally unique songs, except for one J. Mitchell tune tossed in because of my great admiration for her.
You can get a listen to several of the tracks on YouTube, including Sitting Bull's Eyes, Mountaintop, Underground Railroad Rides Again, Portrait of a Lady and Deep Green.
These original compositions were recorded in Nashville at woodshed recorders, an improvised, experimental arrangement that took place in an overlooked corner of Music Row with no official supervision back in the days when an Underground Railroad could actually bring artistic freedom to those who were desperate enough to get onboard and turn the mic on before two dynamite brass players showed up at exactly the right moment, and a renegade mountain man harmonica whiz, Dan Lewis, dropped in to use his magic on the tunes going down in that studio at that moment.
Just now, these vinyl LPs are being sold in record stores in Montreal, Helsinki, Athens, Slovakia, Seoul and God only knows where else, maybe in your town or city! I know this because I have been shipping them to those cities after they were stored in boxes in my closet since 1981, until I started getting calls from the record store operators in the cities mentioned above.
Check it out, Something for Everyone, Songs of Rowland. Take a walk on the wild side of original songwriter adventure, 1977 version.