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Matt Monro (born Terence Edward Parsons; 1 December 1930 – 7 February 1985) [3] was an English singer. Known as "The Man with the Golden Voice", he performed internationally during his 30-year career and sold a reported 23 million records. [ 4 ]
String of Hits: The Shadows: 1 1 March 1980: 3 9 October 1979: 6 Eat to the Beat ‡ Blondie: 1 9 October 1979: 1 13 October 1979: 26 Reggatta de Blanc ‡ The Police: 1 13 October 1979: 4 20 Off the Wall ‡ Michael Jackson: 5 20 October 1979: 1 10 November 1979: 12 Greatest Hits, Vol. 1 ‡ Rod Stewart: 1 8 December 1979: 5 13 Greatest Hits ...
It should only contain pages that are Matt Monro songs or lists of Matt Monro songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Matt Monro songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Matt Monro – "Yesterday"n; Chris Andrews – "Yesterday Man" The Swinging Blue Jeans – "Crazy 'Bout My Baby", "Hippy Hippy Shake" Billy J. Kramer and The Dakotas – "Neon City" Wilson Pickett – "Don't Fight It" Sir Douglas Quintet – "The Story of John Hardy" Fontella Bass – "Rescue Me" The Toys – "A Lover's Concerto"
In 1960, Matt Monro released the song as a single. The song was Monro's first hit single, and spent 16 weeks on the UK's Record Retailer chart, reaching No. 3, [2] also reaching No. 3 on the UK's New Musical Express chart. [3] In 1961, the song was released on Monro's album My Kind of Girl. [4]
Cited by Clark—with "I Couldn't Live Without Your Love" [6] —as her favourite of her hits, "Don't Sleep in the Subway" has also been recorded by Betty Chung, Rita Hovink, Marilyn Maye, Matt Monro, Patti Page, Frank Sinatra, Caterina Valente, and Mari Wilson.
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The title song was sung by Matt Monro. Monro's vocal version is played during the film (as source music on a radio) and properly over the film's end titles. The title credit music is a lively instrumental version of the tune preceded by a brief Barry-composed "James Bond Is Back" then segueing into the "James Bond Theme".