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"Top of the World" is a 1972 song written and composed by Richard Carpenter and John Bettis and first recorded by American pop duo Carpenters. It was a Billboard Hot 100 No. 1 hit for the duo for two consecutive weeks in 1973. It also became Carpenters' second number one and tenth top-ten single in the Billboard Hot 100.
Top of the World was released in May 1955, by United Artists. [12] The United States Air Force endeavoured to support the production of Top of the World as a means to inform the public of the work of the USAF in the far north. USAF photographers would work directly with studio cinematographers.
"Top of the World" is a song written by the group Van Halen for their 1991 album For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge, released as the second single from the album, and spent four non-consecutive weeks at the top of the Billboard Album Rock Tracks chart in the U.S., becoming their eighth number one on this chart.
"Top of the World" is a contemporary folk-country song written by Patty Griffin and most known as recorded and performed in Grammy Award-winning fashion by the Dixie Chicks. Griffin wrote and recorded "Top of the World" in 2000 for Silver Bell , [ 1 ] but a dispute with her label A&M Records caused Griffin to be dropped and the album to go ...
Top of the World (ride), an amusement ride in Freizeit-Land Geiselwind, Germany Top of the World, a 1943 painting by Edward Wadsworth; Top of the World Highway, which connects Alaska, US, with The Yukon, Canada
"Top of the World" is a song by American singer Brandy Norwood, from her second studio album, Never Say Never (1998). The song was written by Rodney "Darkchild" Jerkins , Fred Jerkins III , LaShawn Daniels , Isaac Phillips , Nycolia "Tye-V" Turman , and Mason Betha , with Darkchild and Norwood producing and Mase having featured vocals.
The Top of the World is a 1920 novel by the British writer Ethel M. Dell. [1] Adaptation
The Top of the World is a 1925 American silent drama film directed by George Melford and starring James Kirkwood, Sr., Anna Q. Nilsson, Joseph Kilgour, Mary Mersch, Raymond Hatton, Sheldon Lewis, and Charles A. Post. Based on a 1920 novel of the same title by Ethel M. Dell, the screenplay was written by Jack Cunningham.