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The first chapter "Tell Me Why" is named after a song. Tell me why the stars do shine, Tell me why the ivy twines, Tell me why the sky's so blue. Then I will tell you just why I love you. Because God made the stars to shine, Because God made the ivy twine, Because God made the sky so blue. Because God made you, that's why I love you.
"Tell Me Why" is a popular song written by Marty Gold with the lyrics by Al Alberts. The song was published in 1951. The first version of the song released was a recording by Jerry Gray and his orchestra, released by Decca company in 1951, as catalog number 27621, with the flip side "Restringing the Pearls", [1] by Skeets McDonald (released by Capitol Records as catalog number 1957, with the ...
"Tell Me Why" (1951 song), song written by Al Alberts and Marty Gold, popularized by The Four Aces and by Eddie Fisher "Tell Me Why" (1956 song), song written by Titus Turner, popularized by Marie Knight, and later by Elvis Presley
Masturbation Made a Mess Out of Me (1992 - Feel Good All Over Records) Tell Me Why The Ivy Twines (1994 - Colossal Records) LPs. But Me, I Fell Down (1994 - Feel Good All Over Records) Jump On In (1995 - Making Of Americans Records) DQE & Jad Fair, self-titled collaboration (1996 -Dark Beloved Cloud Records, DBC205)
Ivy signed to Nettwerk to release Long Distance in 2000; [5] [8] the album incorporated music from multiple genres, such as guitar pop, [9] trip hop, [10] and new wave. [11] The third single released, "Edge of the Ocean", became Ivy's first song to enter a musical record chart, peaking at number 160 in the United Kingdom. [12]
In Dickinson season 3’s penultimate episode, “Grief Is a Mouse,” fans of Emily (Hailee Steinfield) and Sue (Ella Hunt), aka Emisue, finally get the moment they’ve been waiting for. Not ...
Social media has been both the downfall and saving grace for rising actor Ivy Wolk, who just made her film debut at Cannes Film Festival in Sean Baker’s critically lauded “Anora.” The 20 ...
[1] [3] [4] Music videos were made for the singles "Enough Is Enough", "If You See Kay", and "Tell Me Why". Power Play failed to meet the critical acclaim of the band's previous album, but the single "Enough Is Enough" managed to reach #50 on the Billboard Hot 100, spending 8 weeks on the chart. The album itself peaked at #37 on Billboard's 200 ...