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"Big Man on Mulberry Street" is a song by Billy Joel from the 1986 album The Bridge. [2] The jazz-influenced song's title refers to Mulberry Street in the Little Italy section of New York City. [ 3 ]
And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street is Theodor Seuss Geisel's first children's book published under the name Dr. Seuss.First published by Vanguard Press in 1937, the story follows a boy named Marco, who describes a parade of imaginary people and vehicles traveling along a road, Mulberry Street, in an elaborate fantasy story he dreams up to tell his father at the end of his walk.
"The 42nd Street and Broadway Strut" music by Albert Von Tilzer; lyrics by Neville Fleeson "42nd Street Dub" by Prince Jammy "42nd Street Dub" by Renegade Soundwave "42nd Street Psycho Blues" by Janis Ian "44th Street Suite" by McCoy Tyner "45 Minutes from Broadway" by George M. Cohan "45th Street At 8th Avenue" by Isao Suzuki Quartet
The Bridge is the tenth studio album by American singer-songwriter Billy Joel, released on July 25, 1986. [7] It was Joel's last studio album produced by Phil Ramone as well as the last to feature Joel's long-time bassist Doug Stegmeyer and rhythm guitarist Russell Javors.
And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street (1937), Theodor Seuss Geisel's first children's book, published under the pen name Dr. Seuss "Big Man on Mulberry Street", a song by Billy Joel; Mulberry (disambiguation)
McElligot's Pool is a children's book written and illustrated by Theodor Geisel under the pen name Dr. Seuss and published by Random House in 1947. In the story, a boy named Marco, who first appeared in Geisel's 1937 book And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street, imagines a wide variety of fantastic fish that could be swimming in the pond in which he is fishing.
The King of Mulberry Street, by Donna Jo Napoli. A young boy in the 1890s travels alone from Napoli (Naples), Italy to New York, where he settles on Mulberry Street. Music. Billy Joel's song "Big Man on Mulberry Street" is a jazz-influenced song from his album The Bridge (1986). [14] Twenty One Pilots' "Mulberry Street" from their album Scaled ...
The skyline of New York City at night. The City That Never Sleeps is a ubiquitously used nickname and advertising slogan for New York City.Photographer Jacob Riis describes The Bowery as never sleeping in his 1898 book Out of Mulberry Street: Stories of Tenement Life in New York City.