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Some Girls is the fourteenth studio album by the English rock band the Rolling Stones, released on 9 June 1978 by Rolling Stones Records.It was recorded in sessions held from October 1977 to February 1978 at Pathé Marconi Studios in Paris and produced by the band's chief songwriters – lead vocalist Mick Jagger and guitarist Keith Richards (credited as the Glimmer Twins) – with Chris ...
And that song I made up on the spur of the moment. I mean, it sounds a bit like it, to be honest. I went on for 11 minutes originally and I was just making up lines. You know, the funniest lines I could come up with. You can go on forever - 'Some girls like to do this, some girls like to do that.'
Cheech And Chong is the 1971 debut album of Cheech & Chong, produced by Lou Adler. It features "Dave", one of their most famous routines. The album peaked at #28 on the Billboard 200 the week of March 4, 1972. The album was nominated for Best Comedy Recording at the 14th Grammy Awards, but lost to Lily Tomlin's This Is a Recording.
"Shattered" is a song by the English rock band the Rolling Stones from their 1978 album Some Girls. The song is a reflection of American lifestyles and life in 1970s-era New York City, but also influences from the English punk rock movement can be heard. The B-side, "Everything Is Turning to Gold", was co-written with Ronnie Wood, who ...
b/w "Wink Dinkerson" (from Cheech and Chong) 24 — — 50 — Big Bambú "Earache My Eye" b/w "Turn That Thing Down" (Non-album track) 1974 9 — 26 4 — Cheech & Chong's Wedding Album "Black Lassie" b/w "Coming Attractions" 55 — — 71 — "(How I Spent My Summer Vacation) Or a Day at the Beach with Pedro & Man" (Parts I and II) 1975 54 ...
Cheech & Chong are a comedy duo founded in Vancouver and consisting of American Cheech Marin and Canadian Tommy Chong. [1] The duo found commercial and cultural success in the 1970s and 1980s with their stand-up routines, studio recordings, and feature films, which were based on the hippie and free love era, and especially the drug and counterculture movements, most notably their love for ...
In the inner fold of the original vinyl LP, there are many pictures of the "wedding and reception". Cheech and Chong, both playing the groom, were dressed to look like conjoined twins, while the bride, a blonde whose face remained hidden by wearing a plain brown bag over her head in every photo, is in the late stages of pregnancy.
Some notes on the recording of the track, taken from the booklet accompanying Where There's Smoke There's Cheech & Chong, read: Cheech sings, and Tommy plays piano—that's all it was at first. In Cheech's words, "George Harrison and those guys were in the next studio recording, and so Lou [Adler] just ran over there and played [it for him].