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The Crew-Cuts (sometimes spelled Crew Cuts or Crewcuts) were a Canadian vocal and doowop quartet, that made a number of popular records that charted in the United States and worldwide. [2] They named themselves after the then popular crew cut haircut, one of the first connections made between pop music and hairstyle.
It should only contain pages that are The Crew-Cuts songs or lists of The Crew-Cuts songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about The Crew-Cuts songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
"(I Just) Died in Your Arms" is the debut single by the English pop rock band Cutting Crew, released on 25 July 1986 as a single from their debut studio album, Broadcast. The song was written by frontman Nick Van Eede, produced by Terry Brown, John Jansen and the band, and mixed at Utopia Studios in London by Tim Palmer.
"Mostly Martha" is a popular song written by Ralph Sterling (music) and Dorcas Cochran (lyrics). The best-known version was recorded by The Crew-Cuts in 1955. This recording was released by Mercury Records as catalog number 70741 along with the flip side of "Angels In the Sky". It first reached the Billboard magazine charts on January 7, 1956 ...
[10] [3] Grinning Souls (the band) became Cutting Crew for all subsequent live work: Van Eede was the only original Cutting Crew member in the group. The new band toured in Germany, Norway, the UK, Canada, Hungary, Switzerland and the USA with, amongst others, ABC , Berlin , Wang Chung , Supertramp , Level 42 and Midge Ure .
The song was one side of a two-sided hit, with the flip side being "Earth Angel." Defending against the criticism that they and other white artists were being "predatory" by "systematically pillaging the R&B charts" and recording cover versions of songs written by black musicians, [69] [70] Crew-Cut member Rudi Maugeri responded:
With a runtime of 2 hours and 48 minutes, Beyoncé's 'Renaissance Film' had to cut a handful of songs performed at her worldwide tour. See the full setlist here.
The recording by The Crew-Cuts was released by Mercury Records as catalog number 70668. [3] It first reached the Billboard magazine charts on August 27, 1955. On the Disk Jockey chart, it peaked at #14; on the Best Seller chart, at #10; on the Juke Box chart, at #20; on the composite chart of the top 100 songs, it reached #80. [4]