Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
1966 – The Blues Project, on the album Projections, titled "I Can't Keep from Crying" 1967 – Brother Joe May, on the album Thank You Lord for One More Day [4] 1994 or before – Laura Henton [5] [6] 1997 or before – Golden Gate Quartet [7] 1998 – Phoebe Snow, on the album I Can't Complain [8]
Hey Nonny Nonny" may refer to: "Hey nonny nonny" or variations, a nonsense refrain popular in English music during the Elizabethan era; Hey Nonny Nonny!, a 1932 American musical with music by William C. K. Irwin and lyrics by Michael H. Cleary and others "Hey Nonny Nonny", a song by Violent Femmes from the 1991 album Why Do Birds Sing?
Released as a single in September 1983, "You're a Hard Dog (To Keep Under the Porch)" reached the eighteenth position on the Billboard Magazine Hot Country Singles chart. The single became Davies' ninth top-twenty hit on the Billboard country chart. [2] In addition, the single peaked within the top-twenty on the Canadian RPM Country Tracks chart.
"A Good Man Is Hard to Find" is a song written by African-American songwriter and later actor Eddie Green, and first published in 1917. It was first recorded by Marion Harris in 1919. It is regarded as "one of the classic blues standards from the Roaring Twenties ".
I mixed one drink; he's in memoriam, To keep my love alive Sir Francis [3] was a singing bird, a nightingale, that's why I tossed him off my balcony to see if he could fly. Sir Athelstane [4] indulged in fratricide; He killed his dad and that was patricide. One night I stabbed him at my mattress-side To keep my love alive, To keep my love alive!
It's hard to believe that it's been 20 years since we learned the real four main food groups: candy, candy canes, candy corns, and syrup. (Duh!) Okay, so Buddy the Elf is not the best source for ...
“He kept saying that every time he sings, he can hear his dad back him up.” Tongi’s mom helped her son realize that it was a “beautiful” thing that he could still hear his dad sing with him.
"Hard to Say" is the title of 1981 song written and performed by the American singer-songwriter Dan Fogelberg. It first appeared on Fogelberg's album The Innocent Age. Fogelberg wrote the song while recovering from surgery. [1] The song features backing vocals by singer Glenn Frey of the Eagles. [2]