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"Streets of New York" is the first single from American hip hop duo Kool G Rap & DJ Polo's 1990 album Wanted: Dead or Alive. It was released as a single with "Poison" as a B-side and was later included on the compilation albums Killer Kuts (1994), The Best of Cold Chillin (2000), Greatest Hits (2002) and Street Stories: The Best of Kool G Rap & DJ Polo (2013).
Streets of New York, a 2006 album by Willie Nile "Streets of New York" (Kool G Rap & DJ Polo song) "Streets Of New York", a 1981 song by The Wolfe Tones, reached #1 in Ireland
"The Streets of New York" is a song originally published by M. Witmark & Sons. The song was from the musical comedy The Red Mill . The song was composed by Victor Herbert and typically plays at the end of Act II in The Red Mill .
"Every Street's a Boulevard (In Old New York)" by Jule Styne / Bob Hilliard, From the Broadway musical "Hazel Flagg" (1953) covered by Dean Martin & Jerry Lewis & others "Everybody's Going to the Devil in New York" (music by Gus Edwards ; lyrics by Edward Gardenier)
The Streets of New York is a musical with book and lyrics by Barry Alan Grael and music by Richard B. Chodosh. Based on the play of the same name by Dion Boucicault, it was originally written for the 1948 Varsity Show at Columbia University, with music by Chodosh and Philip Springer and book by Alan Koehler and Joseph Meredith.
Original Pirate Material is the debut studio album by English hip hop project the Streets, released on 25 March 2002.Recorded mostly in a room in a south London house rented at the time by principal member Mike Skinner, the album is musically influenced by UK garage and American hip hop, while its lyrics tell stories of British working-class life.
Dan W. Quinn was born in 1859 or 1860 in New York City to Benjamin Bernard and Sabina Leonora Quinn (née Wilds). [2] [3] [4] [a] His family moved to San Francisco [citation needed] when he was a child, but returned to New York in the 1870s (leading to later confusion as to his birthplace). His musical career was most likely influenced by his ...
The song describes, in several choruses, the simple delights of Manhattan for a young couple in love. The joke is that these "delights" are really some of the worst, or cheapest, sights that New York has to offer; for example, the stifling, humid stench of the subway in summertime is described as "balmy breezes", while the noisy, grating pushcarts on Mott Street are "gently gliding by".