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The NPR Curious Listener's Guide to Popular Standards. Penguin-Perigee Trade. ISBN 978-0-399-52744-9. Yagoda, Ben (2015). The B-Side: The Death of Tin Pan Alley and the Rebirth of the Great American Song. New York: Riverhead Books. ISBN 978-1-594-48849-8. Zinsser, William (2001). Easy to Remember: The Great American Songwriters and Their Songs ...
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In his 1992 biography A Satisfied Mind: The Country Music Life of Porter Wagoner, Steve Eng estimated that Wagoner had released "at best count...more than eighty albums and numberless singles". [1] By that time Wagoner had released eighty-one Billboard -charting songs, including forty-nine songs that reached the Top 20, twenty-nine songs that ...
Song [5] Original artist [5] U.S. Pop [2] U.S. R&B [3] UK Singles Chart [4] Other charting versions, and notes 1970 "Can't See You When I Want To " David Porter - 29 - Written by David Porter and Ed Lee: 1975 "Ain't No Need of Crying" The Rance Allen Group - 61 - Written by David Porter: 1976 "Hold On to Me" John Edwards - 59 - Written by David ...
The first of Porter's "list songs", it features a string of suggestive and droll comparisons and examples, preposterous pairings and double entendres, dropping famous names and events, drawing from highbrow and popular culture. Porter was a strong admirer of the Savoy operas of Gilbert and Sullivan, many of whose stage works featured similar ...
An instrumental version was done by Phil Upchurch on his 1978 album Phil Upchurch around the same time as the Brothers Johnson version, which is a more upbeat funky version. [ 24 ] The Scottish band Pop Wallpaper released Strawberry Letter 23, "remodelled /.../ for the dance floor", as a single in 1986, with Audrey Redpath on vocals.
It should only contain pages that are The Brothers Johnson songs or lists of The Brothers Johnson songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about The Brothers Johnson songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Music hall songs were sung in the music halls by a variety of artistes. Most of them were comic in nature. There are a very large number of music hall songs, and most of them have been forgotten. In London, between 1900 and 1910, a single publishing company, Francis, Day and Hunter, published between forty and fifty songs a month.