Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Early One Morning" (Roud V9617) is an English folk song with lyrics first found in publications as far back as 1787. [1] A broadside ballad sheet in the Bodleian Library , Oxford, dated between 1828 and 1829 [ 2 ] has the title "The Lamenting Maid" and refers to the lover leaving to become a sailor.
The Friendly Giant is a children's television program that aired on CBC Television from September 30, 1958, through to March 1985. It featured three main characters: a giant named Friendly (played by Bob Homme), who lived in a huge castle, along with his puppet animal friends Rusty (a rooster who played a harp, guitar, and accordion and lived in a book bag hung by the castle window), and ...
"Early in the Morning", a song (listed as traditional), on the 1965 album The Sound of '65 by The Graham Bond Organisation and on the 1970 album Ginger Baker's Air Force "Early in the Morning", a 1979 song on the album Desolation Angels by Bad Company. "Early in the Morning" (Gap Band song), a 1982 single by The Gap Band. Remake: Early in the ...
Early in the Morning is the first full-length album by Irish singer-songwriter James Vincent McMorrow. The album has drawn comparisons with Bon Iver for both its sound and the recording technique. [2] The album was first released in Ireland on 26 February 2010.
James Hewitt (June 4, 1770 – August 2, 1827) was an American conductor, composer, and music publisher. Born in Dartmoor, England, he was known to have lived in London in 1791 and early 1792, but went to New York City in September of that year. He stayed in New York until 1811, conducting a theater orchestra and composing and arranging music ...
Need help? Call us! 800-290-4726 Login / Join. Mail
The Theme is a collection of traditional British and Irish folk tunes representing the four home countries of the United Kingdom and the national maritime tradition.. The piece opens with the first few bars of "Early One Morning" (English, horns and trombones), before the main theme of "Rule, Britannia!
"Dust My Broom" was one of the earliest songs Elmore James performed regularly while he was still living in the Mississippi Delta in the late 1930s. [32] Blues historian Ray Topping has suggested that James may have encountered Robert Johnson during this time, when he learned how to play the song. [ 33 ]