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b/w "Charlie Was a Boxer" (from The Four Aces Sing) 43 26 — "I Only Know I Love You" / 22 38 — The Four Aces Sing "Dreamer" 86 43 — Non-album track "You Can't Run Away from It" / 20 — — The Four Aces Sing "Friendly Persuasion (Thee I Love)" 45 10 29 Hits from Hollywood "Someone To Love" / 47 — — The Four Aces Sing "Written on the ...
Pages in category "The Four Aces songs" The following 12 pages are in this category, out of 12 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. H.
from the album The Four Aces Sing ; B-side "Dreamer" Released: June 16, 1956: Recorded: ... "I Only Know I Love You" is a 1956 popular song produced by Carlo Alberto ...
Alberts also popularized the song "On the Way to Cape May", first through recording it, and then by performing it often on his later television show and specials. The Four Aces biggest hit was "Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing", [4] which was the theme to the 1955 film starring William Holden and Jennifer Jones. The song was a number one hit for ...
This song was recorded by Gene Austin on February 23, 1929 (Victor 21893), peaking on the US charts at #8. [2] It was covered by Steve Gibson in 1948 and by The Four Aces in 1954. [3] It is one of the tracks on Gene Vincent's 1956 debut album Bluejean Bop (Capitol T764). [4] The Beatles, for whom
In 1954, the Four Aces released a version of the song, backed by the Jack Pleis Orchestra. [16] The Four Aces' version was a top-ten hit in the United States, United Kingdom, and Flanders. In 1985 The Four Aces' version was notably featured in the sci-fi movie Back to the Future in a scene when Marty McFly first realizes he is in 1955, arriving ...
The most popular recordings of the song were made by The Four Aces and Eddy Howard, both top 10 hits in 1951. [4] The recording by Eddy Howard was released by Mercury Records (catalog number 5711). It first reached the Billboard chart on September 14, 1951, and lasted 23 weeks on the chart, peaking at number 1, staying there for eight weeks.
The song had two periods of great popularity: in 1929 and in 1952. [4] In 1929, the biggest hit versions were by Gene Austin, by John McCormack, and by George Olsen's orchestra with a vocal by Fran Frey. All three versions were released by Victor Records. [4] [5] In 1952 the most popular version was recorded by The Four Aces.