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"Jolly Good Company" (or "Here We Are Again, Jolly Good Company") is a 1931 song written by English songwriter Huntley Trevor using the pseudonym Raymond Wallace. The song was published in 1931 by the firm of Campbell Connelly .
Here We Are Again is the fourth album by the psychedelic rock band Country Joe and the Fish. It was released in 1969 with the US catalog number Vanguard VSD 79299. [ 3 ] It peaked on the Billboard 200 at number 48, and stayed on the charts for eleven weeks. [ 4 ]
"Here We Go Again!" was released through Capitol Records in 1992 as the debut single of the Los Angeles-based R&B quartet Portrait, who wrote and produced the song, and as the lead single from their self-titled debut album. Its members at the time were singers Phillip Johnson, Eric Kirkland, Irving Washington III, and Michael Angelo Saulsbery. [1]
"Here We Are" is a song written by Vince Gill and Beth Nielsen Chapman, and recorded by American country music group Alabama. It was released in June 1991 as the fifth and final single from their album Pass It On Down. The song reached number 2 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart in August 1991. [2]
"Here We Go... Again" is a song by the Canadian singer-songwriter the Weeknd, from his fifth studio album, Dawn FM (2022). It features the American rapper Tyler, the Creator and was written by the Weeknd alongside its producers Masamune "Rex" Kudo, Bruce Johnston, Brian Kennedy, Benny Bock, and Charlie Coffeen, with Tyler, the Creator and Christian Love receiving writing credits.
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Drillers tend to be young; many prominent musicians in the scene started getting attention while still in their teens. [38] One of the genre's most prominent musicians, Chief Keef, was 16 when he signed a multi-million dollar record contract with Interscope, [39] and in an extreme example, Lil Wayne co-signed the 13-year-old driller Lil Mouse. [40]
The same segment of Sousa tune is sometimes employed for club-specific football chants (for example Plymouth Argyle supporters regularly sing "Ar-guy-ull, ar-guy-ull, ar-guy-ull") and as a vehicle for exhortations to the players (a team that has scored three goals might be encouraged to "give us four" etc.), an impromptu observation on the on-field action ("send him off") or a taunt ("you're ...