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Performing under the name Gene and Eunice, in the Fall of 1954 Forrest and Levy made the first recording of the song, [11] backed by Jonesy's Combo (which included saxophonist Brother William Woodman's band), [14] [15] in the studio in the basement of veteran musician Jake Porter's home, and released in November 1954 on his Combo label (Combo 64) as their first single.
Gene Adkinson "Jamaica Farewell" – w.m. Lord Burgess "Jim Dandy" – w.m. Lincoln Chase "Ko Ko Mo (I Love You So)" – w.m. Forest Wilson, Jake Porter and Eunice Levy "Learnin' The Blues" – w.m. Dolores Vicki Silvers "Life Could Not Better Be" – w.m. Sylvia Fine and Sammy Cahn. Introduced by Danny Kaye in the film The Court Jester.
This Is My Song (Deniece Williams album) (1998) "This is my song" (1934 song), a song written by Lloyd Stone to the tune of Jean Sibelius' Finlandia "This Is My Song" (1951 song), a song written by Dick Charles and popularized in 1953 by Patti Page "This Is My Song" (1967 song), a song written by Charles Chaplin and popularized in 1967 by ...
"This Is My Song" is a popular song composed by Dick Charles, a pseudonym of Richard Charles Krieg, on August 23, 1950. It was published on December 31, 1951. [1] It was recorded by Patti Page in 1953, and issued by Mercury Records as catalog number 70183. The song entered the Billboard chart on August 8, 1953, at number 20, lasting one week. [2]
This Is My Story: Volume One is a final compilation album by American jazz singer Dinah Washington. [2] Reception
Clark recorded the song not only in English, but in French as "C'est Ma Chanson" (lyrics by Pierre Delanoë, who also felt the song a poor choice for Clark), German as "Love, So Heisst Mein Song" (lyrics by Joachim Relin) and Italian as "Cara Felicità" (lyrics by Ciro Bertini). Clark did not even wish to record the song in English, because she ...
Georgia Harkness "A Song of Peace: A Patriotic Song", [1] [2] also known by its incipit, "This is my song", [3] is a poem written by Lloyd Stone (1912–1993). Lloyd Stone's words were set to the Finlandia hymn melody composed by Jean Sibelius in an a cappella arrangement by Ira B. Wilson that was published by the Lorenz Publishing Company in 1934.
1943 "Star Eyes", w & m Don Raye & Gene de Paul from the film I Dood It; 1944 "Mr. Five by Five", w & m Don Raye & Gene de Paul "He's My Guy" w & m Raye & de Paul, introduced in the 1943 film of the same name, and recorded by Ella Fitzgerald, Peggy Lee and also Dinah Shore (included on the CD The War Years: Songs That Won The War, released 2001).