Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"Long Hard Climb", sung/written by Joe Raposo; a version by Jerry Nelson is recorded on Elmo's Lowdown Hoedown, and the song retitled Long Hard Road. "Love the Ocean", sung by The Beach Monsters ( Jerry Nelson , Camille Bonora, Kevin Clash , and Martin P. Robinson ), to the tune of " The Little Old Lady (from Pasadena) " by Jan and Dean , music ...
"Talk to Me", or "Talk to Me, Talk to Me", is a song written by Joe Seneca. [4] It was originally recorded in 1958 by Little Willie John , whose version reached No. 5 on the R&B chart and No. 20 on the Hot 100.
Thompson's identity as the author of the poem was for many years unknown, even to Carmichael; he had been handed the poem anonymously at an event at Indiana University, and the poem only noted the author as "J.B.". Carmichael noted J.B.'s name in the song's sheet music as the author of the poem that inspired the lyrics, and asked for help to ...
Dana – "Please Tell Him That I Said Hello", "It's Gonna Be a Cold, Cold Christmas" Lynsey de Paul – "My Man and Me", "Rhythm and Blue Jean Baby" Duane Eddy – "Play Me Like You Play Your Guitar" The Goodies – "Funky Gibbon" Guys 'n' Dolls – "There's a Whole Lot of Loving"
Alfie interrupts them as he returns home, and storms up to his room. As he gazes at himself in the mirror, he sees Oscar Wilde in a dream, and admits that he loves Robbie ("Man in the Mirror"). After a rehearsal of 'Salome', Lily invites Adele for Sunday dinner, saying that Alfie is hesitant to speak for himself ("Burden of Life" – Reprise).
It was first unseated at No.1 by "Mr. Tambourine Man" by the Byrds, then regained the top spot before being replaced by the Rolling Stones' "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction". Billboard ranked the record as the second biggest single of 1965. "I Can't Help Myself" was the Four Tops' first top 40 single in the UK, peaking at No.23 at the end of 1965 ...
"A Good Man Is Hard to Find" is a song written by African-American songwriter and later actor Eddie Green, and first published in 1917. It was first recorded by Marion Harris in 1919. It is regarded as "one of the classic blues standards from the Roaring Twenties ".
The Nanny is an American sitcom that originally aired on CBS from November 3, 1993, to June 23, 1999, starring Fran Drescher as Fran Fine, a Jewish fashionista from Flushing, Queens who becomes the nanny of three children from an Anglo-American upper-class family in New York City.