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"Oh, You Beautiful Doll" is a ragtime love song published in 1911 with words by Seymour Brown and music by Nat D. Ayer. The song was one of the first with a twelve-bar opening. The first was a decade earlier. The tune has been recorded hundreds of times by many artists from first publication until recent times.
"Baby Girl" entered the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart at number 56 on the chart week of July 24, 2004. The single reached its peak position of number 2 on the chart week of April 2, 2005, a position that it held for two weeks. "Baby Girl" became the highest-charting debut single for a country group since 1991. [6]
"Dear Darlin'" is a song by English recording artist Olly Murs, from his third studio album, Right Place Right Time (2012). The song was released as the third single from the album on 26 May 2013. It was co-written by Murs, Paul Flowers, Ed Drewett and Jim Eliot. Drewett and Eliot also co-produced the song. No further works by Paul Flowers are ...
Face to Face (Daft Punk song) Fantasy (DyE song) Feels Like Summer (Childish Gambino song) Feels Like We Only Go Backwards; Fell in Love with a Girl; Fly (Marshmello song) Fly on the Wings of Love; Freak on a Leash; Fred Come to Bed; Friends (Marshmello and Anne-Marie song) Fritz Love My Tits; From the D 2 the LBC; Fuck Her Gently; Fuck Her ...
Animated images is for any media containing a rapid display of a sequence of images of 2-D or 3-D artwork or model positions in order to create an illusion of movement. The most common method of presenting animation is as a motion picture or video program. This category contains links to images featuring animation.
Dear Darling may refer to: "Dear Darling", song by Asami Imai "Dear Darling", song by Mary Margaret O'Hara from Miss America (later covered by The Walkabouts for Satisfied Mind )
Screen Songs (formerly known as KoKo Song Car-Tunes) are a series of animated cartoons produced at the Fleischer Studios and distributed by Paramount Pictures between 1929 and 1938. [1] Paramount brought back the sing-along cartoons in 1945, now in color, and released them regularly through 1951.
"Heaven Must Have Sent You" was a Top Ten hit on the US R&B Chart, reaching No. 9, and the B-Side of "Put Yourself In My Place", "Darling Baby", made a separate chart entry and reached No. 92 on the Billboard Hot 100 and No. 4 on the R&B Chart.