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Party Time or Partytime may refer to: Party Time (The Heptones album), 1977; Party Time (Arnett Cobb album), 1959 "Party Time" (T.G. Sheppard song), 1981; Party Time?, a 1983 EP by Kurtis Blow; Partytime!, a 1998 special promotional CD release by Gloria Estefan; PartyTime, the Cheeky Girls' debut album "Partytime" (song), a 1984 single by 45 Grave
"Party Time" is a song written by Bruce Channel, and recorded by American country music artist T. G. Sheppard. It was released in June 1981 as the second single from the album I Love 'Em All . The song was Sheppard's eighth number one on the country chart.
Party Time is an album by saxophonist Arnett Cobb recorded in 1959 for the Prestige label. [4] Reception. The Allmusic review awarded the album 4 stars and stated ...
"Party All the Time" is a song by comedian and actor Eddie Murphy, written and produced by Rick James. It was the lead single from Murphy's 1985 debut musical album How Could It Be . [ 2 ] It reached number two on the Billboard Hot 100 for three weeks, behind " Say You, Say Me " by Lionel Richie .
Party Time (2003) In My Mind (Is A Different World – A Cheeky One) (2007) Professional ratings; Review scores; Source Rating; AllMusic [1] The Guardian [2]
"You'll Be Mine (Party Time)" is a 1996 song by Cuban American singer and songwriter Gloria Estefan. It was released as the follow-up to "Reach", as the second single from her seventh studio album, Destiny (1996). The song is a dance track with strong African rhythms and became one of Estefan's most popular songs. Since its appearance, the song ...
Party Time is the third studio album by the Japanese pop music duo ClariS, released on June 4, 2014, by SME Records. The album contains 12 music tracks, three of which were previously released on three of ClariS' singles. Three different editions of the album were released: a regular CD version and two limited editions.
Party Time is an Australian television series which aired 1963 on what would eventually become the Seven Network. A daytime game show aired on Sundays, the first episode aired on 5 May 1963. [ 1 ] The show featured two segments, "Letter Box Game" and "Double Your Money" [ 2 ] It was hosted by Bill Acfield and featured Myra Roper .