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"Hurry Up This Way Again" is a song originally recorded by The Stylistics. It reached #18 in the U.S. R&B chart. The track was written by Cynthia Biggs and Dexter Wansel in 1980. [1] It has been covered by Phyllis Hyman on her album, Forever With You; and sampled in the song, "Politics As Usual" by Jay-Z, on his debut album, Reasonable Doubt.
Year Album Peak chart positions Certifications Record label US [1]US R&B [1]CAN [3]UK [4]1975 The Best of the Stylistics: 41 13 40 1 BPI: Platinum [6]; Avco: 1976 The Best of the Stylistics Volume II
They released the single "Hurry Up This Way Again" that year which brought them back into the R&B Top 20 (peaking at No. 18). Both James Dunn and James Smith departed due to conflicts over the direction of the group; Dunn left before the recording of the album Hurry Up This Way Again (1980) and Smith after the recording of Closer Than Close in ...
All songs written by Patrice Rushen except where noted. ... "Hurry up This Way Again" (Cynthia Biggs) - 6:03 "L 'Ésprit de Joie (The Spirit of Joy)" - 4:40
Mountain Dew has gone through six logos over the last 76 years, with the first reflecting its Southern, moonshine-adjacent roots.Over time, the curvy nature of the original logo gave way to a more ...
Love Don't Ever Say Goodbye - Moor Great Songs International (published with Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp) (2016) Don't You Love Me - Sole Heart Publishing Co (published with Peach Pie Music and Kool Shoes Music) (1995) Hurry Up This Way Again - Moor Great Songs International (published with Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp) (2014)
Others, however, have already had the opportunity to try Mountain Dew's Game Fuel: Citrus Blackberry. They affirmed that it was "pretty fire," calling it a "10/10" that they'll "definitely" get again.
A still used to make moonshine (mountain dew) "Good Old Mountain Dew" (ROUD 18669), sometimes called simply "Mountain Dew" or "Real Old Mountain Dew", is an Appalachian folk song composed by Bascom Lamar Lunsford and Scotty Wiseman. There are two versions of the lyrics, a 1928 version written by Lunsford and a 1935 adaptation by Wiseman.