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The video was shot in her friend's garden and posted in February 2007. She has since shot three more Groovy Dancing Girl videos. Her videos have received more than nine million hits. [4] Her short film "Solo Duet" was funded by the Irish Film Board and was shown in October 2009 at the Darklight Film Festival, a digital film festival. [5]
Groovy Girls was a line of fashion dolls manufactured by the American toy company Manhattan Toy and launched in 1998. Each year new dolls were produced until 2019. Each year new dolls were produced until 2019.
It later made its way into the titles of albums, such as Groovy Decay, a 1982 album by Robyn Hitchcock, and Groovy, Laidback and Nasty, a 1990 album by Cabaret Voltaire. Examples of band names include Groovy Aardvark from Canada, The Groovy Little Numbers from Scotland, and Groovy Rednecks and the Flamin' Groovies from the US. There was also a ...
"Get Your Shine On" debuted at number 47 on the U.S. Billboard Hot Country Songs chart for the week of October 20, 2012, sixteen weeks prior to its release as a single. [6] It also debuted at number 52 on the U.S. Billboard Country Airplay chart for the week of December 22, 2012, due to unsolicited airplay seven weeks before being released to radio. [7]
Gary Wilson went to Albert Grossman's Bearsville Studios in Woodstock, New York, in 1976, a well-known recording studio that has played host to sessions by Bob Dylan, R.E.M., Patti Smith, The Rolling Stones and many other notable acts.
"Shoppin' for Clothes" is a novelty R&B song in the talking blues style, recorded by American vocal group the Coasters in 1960. Originally credited to Elmo Glick, a songwriting pseudonym of Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller, who also produced the track, it was partly based on the 1956 song "Clothes Line (Wrap It Up)", written by Kent Harris and recorded by him as Boogaloo and his Gallant Crew.
"Kinky Afro" is a single by the English alternative rock band Happy Mondays, produced by Paul Oakenfold and Steve Osborne. It was the second single from the band's third studio album Pills 'n' Thrills and Bellyaches on 8 October 1990.
A music video was also filmed for "Please Don't Make Me Cry". It was directed by Bernard Rose and UB40's Brian Travers, and features Ali and Robin Campbell fighting in a boxing ring . It was part of a concept for the Labour of Love album where the two Campbells play two brothers rivalling for the affection of the same girl.