Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In 1972 Conway Twitty recorded the song, with new lyrics written by him, and was known as "(Lost Her Love) On Our Last Date" and was his seventh solo number one on the US Country Chart. It spent one week at number one and a total of 13 weeks on the chart. [9]
The 1982 single "(Lost His Love) On Our Last Date" went topped the Billboard country chart. In 1987, Harris collaborated alongside Dolly Parton and Linda Ronstadt for three top ten singles beginning with "To Know Him Is to Love Him". In 1989, Harris had a solo top ten single with "Heartbreak Hill". Harris's solo singles continued making the ...
Last Date is a live Emmylou Harris album, released in October 1982. Recorded at a series of honky tonks and other small venues on the west coast, Harris conceived the album as a showcase for her Hot Band .
Language links are at the top of the page. Search. Search
Last Date may refer to: "Last Date" (song), a 1960 instrumental by Floyd Cramer; covered with vocals by Conway Twitty in 1972; both versions covered by several performers; Last Date (Emmylou Harris album), 1982; Last Date (Eric Dolphy album), 1965; Last Date (Lawrence Welk album), 1960 "The Last Date", a 1995 episode of Roseanne
1972: Conway Twitty on his album I Can't Stop Loving You/(Lost Her Love) On Our Last Date; the song reached No. 1 on Billboard's Hot Country Singles chart. [ 31 ] 1973: Guy & Ralna included a recording of the song on their 1973 album Country Songs We Love to Sing ; the duo also performed the song numerous times on The Lawrence Welk Show , on ...
"Our Last Summer" is a song by ABBA from the group's seventh studio album, Super Trouper. It was written by Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus. Ulvaeus found lyrical inspiration for the song in a memory of a romance he had when he was a teenager. During a visit to Paris, he met a girl from his home-town who was working as an au pair. [1] "We ...
Final Touches is a full-length album by country music singer Conway Twitty, released in 1993, the year of his death. Allmusic's Dan Cooper called it "a less fitting swan song for Twitty than his duet on “Rainy Night in Georgia” with Sam Moore on the Rhythm, Country and Blues album."