Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Rovers is a 1980 album by the music group The Irish Rovers. It was their first album after they rebranded themselves as The Rovers , dropping "Irish" from the group name. The lively single, "Wasn't That a Party", peaked at #37 in Billboard , #40 in Record World , and #37 in Cash Box .
In 1966, the Rovers signed a recording contract with Decca Records with Charles Dant and recorded their first album, The First of the Irish Rovers, at The Ice House in Pasadena. The album was successful enough to warrant another album, which included their first hit, which was from a song originally written and recorded in 1962 by Shel ...
"The Rover" is a song by English rock band Led Zeppelin written by guitarist Jimmy Page and singer Robert Plant. Although mostly recorded years earlier, it was released on the group's 1975 double album, Physical Graffiti .
The Rovers, 1980 album by the above group; The Rovers, Australian television series; Rovers, British television series; Blackburn Rovers F.C., English Premier League football (soccer) club; Mars rover, explorer craft on the planet Mars; Rovers Return Inn, a fictional pub on the British television soap opera Coronation Street
The Allmusic review by Bruce Eder awarded the album 3.5 stars, stating "Although it doesn't have anything as universally popular as 'The Unicorn' to pull people in, the Irish Rovers' third album is a most genial and accessible record, filled with low-key playing and singing, alternating with bursts of exuberance in the singing and playing.
The Best of the Irish Rovers (1972) The Irish Rovers Live (1972) Emigrate! Emigrate! (1975) The Irish Rovers Live is a 1972 album by The Irish Rovers. Track listing ...
Emigrate! is a 1975 album by the music group The Irish Rovers. The album cover was nominated for a Juno Award. Track listing. Side 1: "The Passing of the Gale"
The Unicorn is the debut studio album of the Canadian Irish folk music group The Irish Rovers, released in 1967 and topped the charts in 1968.. The title track "The Unicorn", a recording of Shel Silverstein's poem based on Noah's Ark, featured Glen Campbell on lead guitar, [1] and reached #2 in the US Adult Contemporary Charts, #7 in the U.S. Hot 100, [2] #4 in Canada, [3] and #5 in Ireland.