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The American lyricist, Nat Burton, wrote his lyric (perhaps unaware that the bluebird is not indigenous to Britain, though the migrant Swallow 'Bluebird' is a well known British harbinger of Spring and Summer) and asked Kent to set it to music. [1] Notable phrases include "Thumbs Up!"
Preceding his death in 1989, Kent journeyed to Kent, England (the Anglo-Saxon namesake of his adopted surname) to view the cliffs of Dover.At the time of his visit, he donated an original manuscript of the song "(There'll Be Bluebirds Over) The White Cliffs of Dover" and participated in the preliminary stages of planning a war commemoration tourist center.
The White Cliffs of Dover are cliffs which form part of the coastline of England, facing the Strait of Dover.. White Cliffs of Dover may also refer to: . The White Cliffs of Dover, a 1944 American romance film based on a verse-novel by Alice Duer Miller
"September Song" (Maxwell Anderson, Kurt Weill) – 4:19 ... (Walter Kent, Nat Burton) – 2:29 "Saturday Night (Is the Loneliest Night of the Week)" ...
The song received extensive radio airplay in the months after its release and was critically praised. O'Sullivan commented: “Neil Diamond covered 'Alone Again (Naturally)' and said he couldn't believe a 21-year-old wrote it, but for me it was just one song I had written.” [8] Neil Sedaka stated when he covered the song in 2020 that he wished that he himself had written the song, because ...
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L. Adam Lambert; Nomy Lamm; Burton Lane; Michael Lange; Jonathan Larson; Jack Lawrence (songwriter) Tom Lehrer; Jerry Leiber; Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller; Carolyn Leigh
For international versions of his L-O-V-E album, Nat King Cole also recorded versions of "L-O-V-E" and other songs, in Japanese (mixed with English words), [4] Italian, [5] German, [6] Spanish [7] and French. [8] In this last language, the song was renamed "Je Ne Repartirai Pas" and translated by Jean Delleme.