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"Come Back When You Grow Up" was a comeback for the 24 year-old Vee, and it reached No.3 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1967. [3] and No.2 in Canada. [4] It was ranked No.15 on Billboard magazine's Top Hot 100 songs of 1967 [5] and No.29 in Canada. [6]
Come Back When You Grow Up is the sixteenth studio album by American singer Bobby Vee and the Strangers [1] and was released in October 1967 by Liberty Records. [1] This was the last album to feature Vee's backup band, the Strangers. The only single from the album was "Come Back When You Grow Up".
"I Wish You Would" is a song recorded by Chicago blues musician Billy Boy Arnold in 1955. It was developed while Arnold was performing with Bo Diddley and incorporates a Diddley-style rhythm. Called "a timeless Chicago blues classic", [ 2 ] "I Wish You Would" is Arnold's best-known song and has been recorded by several artists, including the ...
"Come Back Baby" is a slow blues song written and recorded by the blues singer and pianist Walter Davis in 1940. [1] Ray Charles's version, with the title "Come Back" and with songwriting credited to Charles, was released as the B-side to Charles's 1954 single, "I Got a Woman". The song received airplay and peaked at number four on the R&B ...
"Come Back" is a song by the J. Geils Band, appearing on their 1980 album Love Stinks. "Come Back" was the first single from the album, and reached the US Top 40, peaking at No. 32 and remaining in the Top 40 for five weeks. [1] [2] It peaked at No. 19 for two weeks in Canada. [3] It also made Billboard's Club Play Singles chart, peaking at No ...
"When I Grow Up" is a 1998 song written, recorded and produced by alternative rock band Garbage. The song was released as the fourth international single to be taken from the band's multi-platinum second album Version 2.0 over the course of the following year.
"It's Alright (Baby's Coming Back)" is a song written and recorded by the British pop music duo Eurythmics. It was released as the fourth and final single from their 1985 album Be Yourself Tonight . The song was produced by Dave Stewart , and the song's brass arrangement was devised by Michael Kamen .
Wilson regarded Love You as a spiritual successor to Pet Sounds, namely because of the autobiographical lyrics. [ 345 ] [ nb 46 ] In 1988, Wilson released his first solo album, Brian Wilson , which was an attempt to recapture the sensibilities of Pet Sounds , such that co-producer Russ Titelman touted the album as Pet Sounds '88 . [ 347 ]