Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
A No. 2 C&W hit, "The Tennessee Waltz" became Page's career record. [16] [17] On the Cash Box charts, "Tennessee Waltz" reached No. 1 on December 30, 1950, with the Patti Page, Jo Stafford, Guy Lombardo and Les Paul/Mary Ford versions being given a single ranking; as such "Tennessee Waltz" remained No. 1 in Cash Box through the February 3, 1951 ...
Tennessee Waltz is a Patti Page album, issued by Mercury Records as a 10" long-playing record, as catalog number MG-25154. [1] Track listing. Side 1; No. Title
Clara Ann Fowler (November 8, 1927 – January 1, 2013), better known by her stage name Patti Page, was an American singer.Primarily known for pop and country music, she was the top-charting female vocalist and best-selling female artist of the 1950s, [1] selling over 100 million records during a six-decade-long career. [2]
In 1937, he began to play an amplified guitar, after becoming a student of Eddie Durham, who invented it. ... “Tennessee Waltz” – Patti Page (1950) “Rocket ‘88’” – Jackie Brenston ...
"Tennessee Waltz" went on to be a hit for Patti Page and was also covered by Roy Acuff, the Louvin Brothers, Jerry Lee Lewis, Elvis Presley and many others. "You Belong to Me" also went on to become a major standard. The lesser known "Slow Poke", originally recorded by King, was covered by Hawkshaw Hawkins. [2]
"I Can't Tell a Waltz from a Tango" Al Hoffman Dick Manning: 1954: covered in the United Kingdom by Alma Cogan, whose hit on the UK charts was bigger than Patti Page's was in the US "I Cried" Michael Elias Billy Duke: 1954 "I Don't Care if the Sun Don't Shine" Mack David: 1950 "I'd Rather Be Sorry" 1971 "I'll Keep the Lovelight Burning" Bennie ...
The groups moderately rocked-up version of the Patti Page hit "Tennessee Waltz" was released on the subsidiary Blaze label in late 1959 - with the group now being billed as Bobby Comstock & The Counts - and rose to no.52 on the Billboard pop chart.
Only some of her studio albums featured her popular singles, such as 1952's Tennessee Waltz. Instead, her singles were collected on a series of compilations such as 1955's Page 1 – A Collection of Her Most Famous Songs .