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"A Bushel and a Peck" is a popular song written by Frank Loesser and published in 1950. The song was introduced in the Broadway musical Guys and Dolls, [1] which opened at the 46th Street Theater on November 24, 1950. It was performed on stage by Vivian Blaine and a women's chorus as a nightclub act at the Hot Box. It is the first of two ...
"All at Once You Love Her" Richard Rodgers: Oscar Hammerstein II: 1955 with Mitchell Ayres Orchestra & Ray Charles Singers From the musical Pipe Dream [9] [10] "All By Myself" Irving Berlin Arranged by Jack Andrews & Joe Lipman [11] 1961 [12] with Mitchell Ayres Orchestra [11] featuring Guitar played by Tony Mottola [12] "All I Do is Dream of ...
"And I Love You So" was a 1973 hit for singer Perry Como on his RCA Victor album of the same name, And I Love You So, reaching No. 29 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. It would be the last of his many popular recordings, dating back to 1943, to reach the Top 40. It also spent one week at No. 1 on the easy listening chart. [1]
"You Can't Make A Turtle Come Out" "The Duchess at Tea" "Piccolomini" "Stone Games" "La Bamba (song)" "It's A Small World" "Love Somebody / A Bushel and a Peck" "Un Elefante" "Meeting In the Building" "Mommy, What If..." "Matthew, Mark, Luke & John" "There Was A Little Man" "The Wee Cock-Sparra'" "Rattlin' Bog" "Woodchuck" "Down in the Valley ...
This is a partial list of Doris Day's recorded songs. Note that if no album name is given, the song was only issued as a single; if an album name is given, the song was only released as an album, unless it is stated that the song was released both as a single and on an album.
It is commonly accepted by jazz historians that this song is in reference and tribute to Peck Kelley, a 1920s jazz pianist. [2] However McKinley, talking to George Simon says, "A lot of people seem to think I was referring to Peck Kelley , and some years later Peck even thanked me for it.
Jimmy Justice (released 1964 by Blue Cat Records as catalog number 101, with the flip side "The Guitar Player (Her and Him)") [16] Gisele MacKenzie (released by Capitol Records in the United States as catalog number 2256, with the flip side "My Favorite Song", [5] and in Australia as catalog number CP-200, with the flip side "Adios") [17]
It is used as counterpoint [clarification needed] to the lines it precedes in the lyrics, as in the following excerpt: "Hot diggity, dog ziggity, boom What you do to me, When you're holding me tight." At the end of the song, Como exclaimed "Hot dog!" before the last two chords. The phrase "hot diggity" or "hot diggity dog!" dates to at least ...