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"Takin' Care of Business" is a song written by Randy Bachman and first recorded by Canadian rock group Bachman–Turner Overdrive (BTO) for their 1973 album Bachman–Turner Overdrive II. The lead vocal is sung by Randy.
The album's second and bigger hit single is "Takin' Care of Business". Though it never cracked the Top 10 on the US singles charts (reaching #12 in 1974), it became one of the band's most enduring anthems and stayed on the Billboard chart for 20 weeks. [3] Both singles reached #3 on the Canadian RPM chart.
Randy Bachman and Fred Turner also appeared in the 2012 comedy movie The Campaign, making a cameo performing the song "Taking Care of Business". [45] The song "Takin' Care of Business" was also the title of a 1990 movie starring Jim Belushi as an escaped convict who wins tickets to see the Chicago Cubs in the World Series and finds the Filofax ...
Frost had been a professional bull rider for eight years before the event. He won the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA) bull riding world championship in 1987. In 1988, Frost was a part of the Challenge of the Champions, which put him up against the previously unrideable bull named Red Rock, who was owned by the Growney Brothers Rodeo Company and was the 1987 PRCA Bucking Bull of ...
During their performance in the episode, Homer Simpson humorously yells "get to the working overtime part" while they perform "Takin' Care of Business". In 2001, Bachman received an honorary Doctorate of Music from Brandon University in Brandon, Manitoba , along with the other members of The Guess Who.
Donald Byrd/Herbie Hancock – Takin' Care of Business (TCB LP 1002) [7] Jammin' with Herbie Hancock (TCB LP 1006) [8] "T.C.B. with Herbie" = "Out of This World"
"Takin' Care of Business" 3 14 — — — — — — — 12 "You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet" 1 4 3 6 1 3 1 1 2 1 RIAA: Gold [13] Not Fragile
On July 30, 1989, at Cheyenne Frontier Days in Cheyenne, Wyoming, after completing a successful 85-point ride on a Brahma bull named Takin' Care of Business, who Bad Company Rodeo owned, Frost dismounted and landed in the mud. The bull then turned, knocked Frost over, pressed his right horn on Frost's back, and pushed him against the muddy ...