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In the earliest known versions, the first ingredient for boys is either "snips" or "snigs", [6] the latter being a Cumbrian dialect word for a small eel. The rhyme sometimes appears as part of a larger work called What Folks Are Made Of or What All the World Is Made Of.
Sugar & Spice, a 2001 American film; Sugar and Spice, a Japanese film; Sugar and Spice (Australian TV series), an Australian children's television series that ran from 1988 to 1989 "Sugar & Spice" (Picket Fences), which generated controversy because it included a lesbian kiss; Sugar and Spice (UK TV series), a show with Philip Morrow
While Tarplin plays and Robinson sings the lyrics, the other Miracles (Bobby Rogers, Ronnie White, Pete Moore and Claudette Robinson, answer in classic call-and-response style. Billboard stated that the song has a "good lyric line, great hand clappin' beat and mighty good on-frantic performance by the group."
You're sugar, you're spice, you're everything nice and you're Daddy's Little Girl. x2 In popular culture. ... lyrics and song by Ruth M.Reed, 1949
The Cryan' Shames are an American garage rock band from Hinsdale, Illinois.Originally known as The Travelers, the band was formed by Tom Doody ("Toad"), Gerry Stone ("Stonehenge"), Dave Purple ("Grape") of The Prowlers, Denny Conroy from Possum River, and Jim Fairs from The Roosters, Jim Pilster ("J.C. Hooke", so named because he was born without a left hand and wore a hook), and Bill Hughes.
The version of Sugar and Spice featured in the single release differs slightly from the version included in the album, as it has a different opening verse and words differ throughout the song. The B-side included in the release is the demo version of Sugar and Spice featuring keyboard player Mike Barson on vocals; it also includes an extra verse.
"Sugar and Spice" is a 1963 song by Merseybeat band The Searchers written by Tony Hatch under the pseudonym Fred Nightingale. [1] It made #2 on the UK charts (on Pye ), #44 in the USA charts, [ 2 ] [ 3 ] and #11 in the Canadian CHUM Charts . [ 4 ]
Hatch envisioned his embryonic composition "as a sort of doo wop R&B song", which he thought to eventually pitch to the Drifters: [5] He had scored his biggest success to date with the Searchers' "Sugar and Spice" modelled on the Drifters' hit "Sweets for My Sweet", and had also produced a cover version of the Drifters' "Up on the Roof" for ...