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Major Lance (April 4, 1939, [a] – September 3, 1994) [2] was an American R&B singer. After a number of US hits in the 1960s, including " The Monkey Time " and " Um, Um, Um, Um, Um, Um ", he became an iconic figure in Britain in the 1970s among followers of Northern Soul .
Major Lance's Greatest Hits Recorded Live at the Torch is an album by the soul artist Major Lance, released in 1973 on Contempo Records.It was recorded live in front of a sell-out audience [3] at the Torch, Tunstall, Stoke-On-Trent, on 9 December 1972 and has been described as "perhaps the best Northern soul album ever made", [4] and "a one-off gig when everything came together in perfect ...
It should only contain pages that are Major Lance songs or lists of Major Lance songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Major Lance songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
In November 1965, they released a second single, "Mr. Frantic", again written and sung by Dwight, and again unsuccessful. After a tour of Germany, the band returned to England to work as the backing band for Major Lance with an expanded line-up of Dwight, Brown, Pat Higgs (trumpet), Dave Murphy (saxophone), Fred Gandy (bass) and Paul Gale ...
King Kong: Jean-Luc Ponty Plays the Music of Frank Zappa, a 1970 album; King Kong (Gorilla Zoe album), released in 2011; King Kong (1959 musical), a South African jazz-influenced musical; King Kong (2013 musical), a musical that premiered in Australia, sometimes titled King Kong: The Eighth Wonder of the World; King Kong (2005 soundtrack), the ...
This is a list of professional wrestlers and other people who appeared in the original incarnation of Extreme Championship Wrestling. Wrestlers who used more than one ringname while in ECW will be listed under the ring name for which they used the most or were best known in order to clean up the list, since any performer who used multiple ring names most likely has them listed on their ...
"King Kong" is the second single from the album Jibbs Featuring Jibbs by American rapper Jibbs. The song features fellow hip hop artist Chamillionaire . It is written by Javon Campbell, Derryl Howard, Bradford Ray, Orlando Watson, and Maurice Wilson.
A brief parody of the Love, American Style theme plays at the end of "Clown Without Pity" and again at the end of "King Homer". The "King Homer" segment is a parody of the 1933 film King Kong. [1] The tribal leader is heard saying "Mosi Tatupu, Mosi Tatupu", which the subtitles inform us means "We will sacrifice the blue-haired lady."