Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The music video for "Lose Yourself" was filmed in his hometown Detroit, Michigan, [20] and thus contains numerous shots of the city, including the Ambassador Bridge. The video is a mixture of multiple scenarios, including scenes from and reminiscent of the movie 8 Mile , and Eminem rapping next to the "8 Mile Rd. Mobile Court" sign that appears ...
Jones served in the U.S. Navy, where he played piano in a band, before studying music at the Juilliard Conservatory of Music.He formed a band, Joe Jones and his Atomic Rebops, in the late 1940s; band members played on Roy Brown's 1947 hit "Good Rocking Tonight". [4]
"You Talk Too Much" is a 1960 single by American R&B singer Joe Jones, co-written by Jones and Reginald Hall. The song reached Number 3 on the Billboard Hot 100. Released by Ric Records, it would be the label's only commercial success. [2] Later that year, the song was adapted into French by Georges Aber as "Tu parles trop" and was a hit for ...
All compositions by Joe Jones except where noted. "Boogaloo Joe" – 6:35 "Don't Deceive Me (Please Don't Go)" (Chuck Willis) – 8:05 [note: on original LP release, this song was titled "People Are Talking"] "Boardwalk Blues" – 4:18 "Dream On Little Dreamer" (Fred Burch, Jan Crutchfield) – 6:40 "Atlantic City Soul" – 4:55 "6:30 Blues ...
"I Heard That!!" (Dave Grusin, Quincy Jones) "Things Could Be Worse for Me" (Charles May) "What Good Is a Song" (Jones) "You Have to Do It Yourself" (Jones) (theme from Rebop) "There's a Train Leavin'" (Jones) "Midnight Soul Patrol" (Jones) "Brown Soft Shoe" (Jones) "Superstition" (Stevie Wonder)
Eminem made a last-minute appearance at tonight’s rally for the Kamala Harris-Tim Walz campaign, introducing former President Barack Obama at an event in his native Detroit. The rapper took the ...
This list of performances on Top of the Pops is a chronological account of popular songs performed by recording artists and musical ensembles on Top of the Pops, a weekly BBC One television programme that featured artists from the UK Singles Chart.
Much like the successful seventies album Wanted!The Outlaws, Walking the Line features duets and solo cuts taken from various albums and repackaged as a single album. Jones and Haggard had recorded a duet album, A Taste of Yesterday's Wine in 1982 (the title cut having been by Nelson) while Haggard and Nelson had collaborated on Pancho & Lefty the same year.