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Eddy Arnold Sings Them Again: 1951 "There's Been a Change in Me" b/w "Tie Me to Your Apron Strings Again" (Non-album track) 1 — Country Songs I Love to Sing "Kentucky Waltz" b/w "A Million Miles from Your Heart" (Non-album track) 1 — Eddy's Songs "I Wanna Play House With You" b/w "Something Old, Something New" (Non-album track) 1 — Eddy ...
Richard Edward Arnold (May 15, 1918 – May 8, 2008) was an American country music singer. He was a Nashville sound (country/popular music) innovator of the late 1950s, and scored 147 songs on the Billboard country music charts, second only to George Jones.
The Arnold version was the first of three songs through the mid 1950s to spend 21 weeks at No. 1. In 1950, Hank Snow 's " I'm Movin' On " would match the record, and in 1955, their record would become jointly held by Webb Pierce with his cover of Jimmie Rodgers ' " In the Jailhouse Now ."
I Walk Alone (Marty Robbins song) I Wanna Play House With You; I Want to Go with You; I'll Do as Much for You Someday; I'll Hold You in My Heart (Till I Can Hold You in My Arms) I'm Throwing Rice (At The Girl That I Love) I've Been Thinking; If I Had You (Alabama song) It's a Sin (Eddy Arnold song)
I Wanna Play House With You" is a 1951 song by Eddy Arnold, written by Cy Coben. The song went to number one on the Country & Western Best Seller lists for six weeks and a total of twenty-four weeks on the chart. [1] The B-side of "I Wanna Play House With You", entitled, "Something Old, Something New" (also a Coben composition) peaked at number ...
In his book Eddy Arnold: Pioneer of the Nashville Sound, author Michael Streissguth describes how Arnold and Walker composed the song: [2]. Cindy Walker, who had supplied Eddy with "Take Me in Your Arms and Hold Me" (a number-one country record in 1949 and Eddy's first Cindy Walker release), recalled discussing the idea for "You Don't Know Me" with Eddy as she was leaving one of Nashville's ...
"Bouquet of Roses" was Eddy Arnold's third number one in a row on the Juke Box Folk Record chart and spent 19 weeks on the Best Selling Folk Records chart. [5] In 1949, when RCA Victor introduced its new 45 RPM single format this record was among seven initial releases (Catalog #48-0001) and the first in the Country and Western category.
Cattle Call is an album by American country music singer Eddy Arnold, released by RCA Victor in August 1963. The album features a number of western standards, as well as a new recording of "The Cattle Call", which was a chart-topping hit for Arnold in 1955.