Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
However, radio airplay by stations in California prompted the song's re-release in December, affording "Don't Say You Don't Remember" much greater American chart success during the winter of 1972 (#15 Billboard and #16 Cash Box). The song was featured on her 1972 album, I'll Make You Music [5] and was arranged by Charles Calello. [6]
Helen Miller (30 June 1925 – 2 February 2006) [1] was an American songwriter. She collaborated with several lyricists, notably Howard Greenfield in the early 1960s, and with him wrote several pop hits, including " Foolish Little Girl " by The Shirelles , and " It Hurts To Be In Love " by Gene Pitney .
Pages in category "Songs written by Helen Miller (songwriter)" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Cash Box described it as "a most attractive, easy beat cha cha romancer." [6] The song released as a single was a demo recorded at Associated Studios in NYC on 7th Avenue.The plan was to re-record it at the studios Scepter Records had access to at the time, but when their attempts at re-recording proved to be unsatisfactory, Luther Dixon sent out the Shirelles to lay down their vocals on the ...
Howard Greenfield (March 15, 1936 – March 4, 1986) was an American lyricist and songwriter, who for several years in the 1960s worked out of the famous Brill Building.He is best known for his successful songwriting collaborations, including one with Neil Sedaka from the late 1950s to the mid-1970s, and near-simultaneous (and equally successful) songwriting partnerships with Jack Keller and ...
Miller is one of Trump’s closest loyalists — he has been with Trump since 2016, and was one of the few to survive all four years of Trump’s presidency in the White House.
Ezra Miller is the subject of a new Vanity Fair exposé, which looks at the 29-year-old actor's "dark spiral" over the past few years.More than a dozen people were interviewed for the lengthy ...
Fancy Meeting You Here is a 1958 RCA Victor studio album of duets by the American singers Bing Crosby and Rosemary Clooney, arranged by Billy May, who also conducted the orchestra. [2] The album was originally issued in both mono and stereo, catalog numbers LPM/LSP 1854.