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Beverly Marie Lewis (née Jones) is an American Christian fiction novelist and adult and children's author of over 100 books. Lewis is a former schoolteacher and musician. She started playing the piano at age four, and began writing short stories and poetry when she was nine years old.
The song is performed by Pardon-Me-Pete the Groundhog (voiced by Buddy Hackett) in the 1979 Rankin/Bass television special Jack Frost (TV special). [5] Performed by Ted Lewis and Eddie Chester in Abbott and Costello's "Hold That Ghost' (1941)." The song is performed by Frank Sinatra and Sammy Davis Jr. in a commercial for the game Titanfall.
According to Lewis, he wrote the song in only a few minutes. He drove to his attorney's office and told him, "Bob, give me a pen and paper!" [1] According to Lewis, the song is a love song, and the meaning of the word "drug" in the song was purposely open ended. [2] "It's really a love song.
Katey Sagal & The Forest Rangers recorded their version of the song in 2012 for 12th episode of the 5th season of the TV show, The Sons of Anarchy. Cecily Strong and Sasheer Zamata covered the song on Saturday Night Live on 21 January 2017 as a musical tribute to former President Barack Obama, who had just left office the previous day.
Lightning Crashes. " Lightning Crashes " is a song by American rock band Live. It was released in September 1994 as the third single from their second studio album, Throwing Copper. Although the track was not released as a single in the United States, it received enough radio airplay to peak at No. 12 on the Billboard Hot 100 Airplay chart in 1995.
The song was written by Damon Sharpe, Greg Lawson, Georgette Franklin, Jeremy Monroe and Amille D. Harris, and produced by Ric Wake, Richie Jones and Cory Rooney. At the time of the song's release, Lopez was transitioning into a sex symbol and in a relationship with American rapper Sean Combs. Lyrically, "Love Don't Cost a Thing" is described ...
The song's initial release in the spring of the year had been only minimally successful in the U.S. (#102). However, radio airplay by stations in California prompted the song's re-release in December, affording "Don't Say You Don't Remember" much greater American chart success during the winter of 1972 (#15 Billboard and #16 Cash Box).
Bob Dylan performed a live cover of the song in Nottingham, England on October 28, 2022, the same day that Lewis died. Dylan introduced the song by telling the audience, "I don’t know how many of you know, but Jerry Lee’s gone. We’re gonna play this song, one of his. Jerry Lee will live forever – we all know that". [4]