Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Like Geier himself, Puddles has a baritone singing voice, and sings mostly covers of songs. Puddles has a depressed persona and refrains from speaking on stage or giving interviews. [5] [6] [7] His shows include a mix of silent prop comedy, mime, and audience participation with songs interplayed throughout creating a narrative structure. [8]
The 1970 Smokey Robinson and the Miracles hit "The Tears of a Clown" references Pagliacci in the lines "Just like Pagliacci did, I try to keep my sadness hid". An earlier song cowritten by Robinson, "My Smile Is Just a Frown Turned Upside," sung by Carolyn Crawford in 1964, had included the same line.
The following is a table of all songs recorded and/or written by Puddle of Mudd. The columns Title, Year, and Album list each song title, the year in which the song was recorded, and the official US studio album. The column Author(s) lists the writer(s) of each song. There are 91 songs on this list.
The band began recording the album in March 2011 and commenced within a three-week period. After touring and rehearsals for a fifth studio effort left the band mentally and physically exhausted, the idea for a cover record came into play. [3] The choice of songs was whittled down from 30 candidates and eventually led to the recording of 15 ...
"Blurry" is a song by American rock band Puddle of Mudd. It was released on October 16, 2001, as the second single from the band's debut album Come Clean (2001). It was 2002's most successful rock song in the United States, topping the Billboard Mainstream Rock and Modern Rock Tracks charts as well as their year-end listings.
In February 1960, the two songs were issued as a single on the Donna label, and in August 1960 it was also released on the Del-Fi label. On August 15, 1960, "Lonely Guy" bubbled under the Hot 100 at number 111, reached number four on Cashbox , and spent ten weeks at number one on Los Angeles's KFWB Fabulous Forty.
Despite its being released as a single in 2007, Fuse rated this song as the best Modern Rock song of 2008. As of 2010, "Psycho" is the band's second best-selling single in the U.S., behind only the 2002 mega-hit " Blurry ", with 700,000 copies sold.
The title of the song "Re: Person I Knew" (recorded first on his 1962 Moon Beams album) is an anagram of the name of Evans's longtime producer, Orrin Keepnews. [7] The lineup of Evans originals is rounded out by two of his best-known compositions, " Funkallero ," which although previously recorded by the pianist on several occasions was first ...