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It entered Billboard magazine's pop album chart on December 26, 1960, peaked at No. 10, and remained on the chart for nine weeks. [1] It was one of only two Duane Eddy albums to enter the top 10, the other being Have 'Twangy' Guitar Will Travel. [1] The popularity of the album led to the 1961 release of "$1,000,000 Worth of Twang, Vol. II". [2] [3]
"Million Dollar Bill" is a song performed by American recording artist Whitney Houston from her seventh and final studio album, I Look to You (2009). The song was written by Alicia Keys , her husband Kaseem "Swizz Beatz" Dean and Norman Harris , and produced by Keys and Beatz.
One Million Dollars may refer to: Hard Time for Princes or One Million Dollars, a 1965 Italian comedy film; One Million Dollars, a 1915 film by John W. Noble "One Million Dollars", a 2023 song by 100 gecs from 10,000 gecs
"Million Dollar Bash" (takes 1 & 2) Dylan: One of the best known basement songs, released on the 1975 album. Recorded by Fairport Convention and released in 1969 on Unhalfbricking. Cash Box said that "Dylan leads a nonsense/rapsong about the party of parties where everybody must have gotten stoned." [36] Take two was released on the 1975 album ...
Virginia-bred singer Tommy Richman makes his Billboard Hot 100 debut with “Million Dollar Baby” after the single experienced staggering growth in a rollout that started April 13 when Richman ...
The song, recognized as "the best-selling single of all time", was released before the pop/rock singles-chart era and "was listed as the world's best-selling single in the first-ever Guinness Book of Records (published in 1955) and—remarkably—still retains the title more than 50 years later".
11 of the most interesting things you can buy with one million dollars. Tatiana Pile. Updated July 14, 2016 at 10:56 PM. 12 July - Ep. 3.
"If I Had $1000000" is one of the earliest-composed Barenaked Ladies songs. It was first conceived as a simple improvised song while Page and Robertson were counsellors at a summer music camp. On the way home from camp, Robertson played the tune for the campers, randomly listing amusing things he would buy with a million dollars.