Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"So Fine" is a song by Jamaican artist Sean Paul. It was released as the lead single from his fourth album, Imperial Blaze. The track was premiered on 25 April 2009 on his official website. The official remix features Lomaticc & Sonny Brown in bhangra style.
The first release from Pompeii Records was "So Fine" by Ike & Tina Turner and the Ikettes in March 1968. [6] The song became the title track for the album So Fine (1968). [7] The single reached No. 50 on the Billboard R&B Singles chart and No. 117 on the Bubbling Under the Hot 100 in 1968. [8] [9]
"So Fine" (Guns N' Roses song), 1991 "So Fine" (Howard Johnson song), 1982 "So Fine" (Johnny Otis song), a 1959 song by The Fiestas, covered by many artists "So Fine" (Sean Paul song), 2009 "So Fine", a 1981 song by Chic from the album Take It Off "So Fine", a 1993 song by Mint Condition from the album From the Mint Factory
"So Fine" is a 1982 soul/dance single by Howard Johnson, former lead singer of Niteflyte. The single made it to number one on the dance charts for one week. [ 2 ] " So Fine" peaked at number six on the soul singles chart, but failed to make the Hot 100 . [ 3 ]
"So Fine" is the title of the fifth track from A New World Record by Electric Light Orchestra. Recorded in 1976 at Musicland Studios in Munich, Germany, this track is peppy and upbeat, contrasting with "Mission (A World Record)", the previous track. It is a typical example of ELO's (at the time) cutting-edge use of technology and recording ...
"So Fine" is a song by the American rock band Guns N' Roses, released as a promotional single in 1992. It features bassist Duff McKagan on lead vocals, with Axl Rose singing the intro song's verses. The song, written entirely by McKagan, is a tribute to Johnny Thunders. [1] [2]
Philadelphia Eagles star receiver A.J. Brown could launch a book club of his own after a little sideline reading skyrocketed self-help author Jim Murphy to the hottest seller on Amazon overnight.
So Fine was filmed on a budget of $9,800,000, and in its three weeks in theaters, grossed a total of $9,381,808, [11] and was considered a financial loss. Bergman later reflected, "The movie was a bomb, but I must say that, to this day, some of the funniest things I’ve ever done were in that movie.