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"Alley Cat", also known as "Alleycat" and "The Alley Cat," is a popular instrumental song made most famous by the Danish pianist and composer Bent Fabric, released in 1962. [1] Fabric (born Bent Fabricius-Bjerre) wrote the tune under the pseudonym Frank Björn.
The song was re-released worldwide under the name "Alley Cat" on Atco Records the following year, and went to #1 in Australia and #49 in Germany. The tune also became a hit in the United States; the song hit #2 on the AC chart and #7 on the Billboard Hot 100, [2] and the LP of the same name hit #13 on the Billboard 200. [3] "
Alley Cat is the debut album by Danish pianist Bent Fabric. The album features the Grammy Award-winning single "Alley Cat", and was a charting album in 1962-63. [1] [2] The title song is used as a recurring gag on the short-lived 1990 TV show Get a Life. The cover was designed by Haig Adishian, and was a Billboard Album Cover of the Week in ...
The Alley Cats (1960s group), a Los Angeles doo-wop group; The Alley Cats (punk rock band), a Los Angeles punk rock band; Alley Cat, the debut album by Danish pianist Bent Fabric "Alley Cat" (song), a song by Bent Fabric that won the Grammy Award for Best Rock & Roll Recording, 1962
"Alley Cat" is the first Seventh Wonder song to have an accompanying music video from the band. The 30-minute title track The Great Escape is the first (and so far only) song by the band to be longer than 10 minutes. It is an epic song based on the poems 'Aniara' by Swedish Nobel laureate Harry Martinson. [1]
You’d be hard-pressed to find someone who doesn’t rap “2 Fast, 2 Furious” when they read the movie title — and that’s all thanks to the opening lines of Ludacris’ platinum hit.
Dooyoo.co.uk described "Charly" as "An infamous song which was played at very loud volumes for weeks and its music video turned it into one of the controversial songs of its time." [ 9 ] NME named it Single of the Week, [ 10 ] writing, "A pretty damn naughty techno track which cleverly uses a catch line from an old public information film.
That Honey Horn Sound is an album by Al Hirt released by RCA Victor in 1965. The album was produced by Chet Atkins and arranged by Anita Kerr and Claus Ogerman. [3]The single "Fancy Pants" hit #9 on the Adult Contemporary chart and #47 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1965. [4]