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"The Music's No Good Without You" Cher Cher James Thomas Mark Taylor Paul Barry: Living Proof: 2001 [14] "My Love" Cher Dario Brigham-Bowes Lorne Ashley Brigham-Bowes Paul Barry Greta Svabo Bech: Closer to the Truth: 2013 [50] "My Song (Too Far Gone)" Cher Cher Brett Hudson Mark Hudson: Take Me Home: 1979 [55] "My Love" (originally by Paul ...
Reviewed in Melody Maker, both sides were described as "easy-to-listen-to numbers, especially Little White Bull, which has a Children's Hour flavour about it". [3] Reviewing for Disc, Don Nicholl described "Little White Bull" as "a jingly novelty ballad with Tommy using his Cockney accent for the title phrasing".
"No" is a song by American pop-rock group Bulldog. It was the first release from their 1972 eponymous debut album. [1] Vocals are provided by bassist Billy Hocher, with a sound similar to Joe Cocker. The song became an international hit, reaching #44 in the U.S. and #63 in Canada.
This is a list of songs by their Roud Folk Song Index number; the full catalogue can also be found on the Vaughan Williams Memorial Library website. Some publishers have added Roud numbers to books and liner notes, as has also been done with Child Ballad numbers and Laws numbers.
The cattle are always belted, with a broad white belt completely encircling the body between the shoulder and the hind legs. For bulls, no white is permitted anywhere else on the animal; cows with some limited white markings on the lower legs can be registered in an appendix of the herd-book.
The title of the album, No Sound Without Silence, is both a shortening of philosophical idea put forward by the band and a critical comment on the music industry. [14] No Sound Without Silence is a phrase derived from an idea put forward by the band, where meaningful statements cannot be made without thinking about what you want to say first ...
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
The song was chosen by public address announcer Tommy Edwards after he heard it playing in a local movie theater two years after the song's release in 1982. [5] Since 2006, a version arranged by Ethan Stoller and Kaotic Drumline's Jamie Poindexter has been used. [6] "Sirius" was the opening number of the 2000 documentary Michael Jordan to the ...