Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Love Letters in the Sand" is a popular song first published in 1931. It began life as a poem by Nick Kenny. J. Fred Coots read the poem in the New York Daily Mirror, and obtained Kenny's permission to set the poem to music. He went through 4 different melodies before settling on the published version known today.
Kenny is mainly remembered today as the lyricist of the 1931 popular song standard, "Love Letters in the Sand", a 1957 gold record hit for Pat Boone. Kenny's next big success, "Gold Mine in the Sky," inspired the Gene Autry movie, Gold Mine in the Sky (1938) and enabled Kenny and his brother Charles to launch their own music firm, Gold Mine in ...
Cathedral in the Pines, another 1930s song (along with There's a Gold Mine in the Sky) that Pat Boone recorded in 1957 following his success with Love Letters in the Sand [5] Last Night, (or Why Couldn't It Last Last Night), which was the theme song for the Joe Venuti Orchestra. [13] Writeen with Austen Croom-Johnson. The Moon is a Golden Coin ...
"Love Letter" is a single released by Gackt on March 1, 2006 under Nippon Crown. [1] It peaked at ninth place on the Oricon weekly chart and charted for seven weeks. [2] The A-side and B-side were used in the Mobile Suit Zeta Gundam movie Love is the Pulse of the Stars (星の鼓動は愛, Hoshi no kodō wa ai), as opening and ending themes, respectively. [3] "
Song in a Seashell is an album by American country music singer Tom T. Hall released in 1985 on Mercury Records that reached #63 in the country music chart. Three singles from the album charted, “A Bar With No Beer” at #40, [1] “Down in the Florida Keys” at #42 and “Love Letters in the Sand” at #79.
The 300-letter collection detailed the love between soldier Gilbert Bradley and his lover -- who signed the letters with the initial "G". Decades later it was discovered that his pen pal's name ...
Elvis Presley recorded a version of "Love Letters" on May 26, 1966. [15] Just over a week later, on June 8, 1966, RCA released the song as a single, with "Come What May" as the B-side. [15] [16] "Love Letters" peaked at No. 19 on the Billboard Hot 100 on July 22, 1966, staying on the chart for only seven weeks. [17]
I Love You" 8 5 1985 "A Bar with No Beer" 40 — Song in a Seashell "Down in the Florida Keys" 42 — 1986 "Love Letters in the Sand" 79 — "Down at the Mall" 65 — — "—" denotes releases that did not chart