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"Black Pearl" is a song written by Phil Spector, Toni Wine and Irwin Levine, and performed by Sonny Charles and the Checkmates, Ltd. It was inspired by the 1968 Sidney Poitier film For Love of Ivy about Ivy Moore, a maid who after nine years of service leaves to go to secretarial school. [ 1 ]
Or they will say, “My mom, my dad, that’s all they used to do when I was a little fellow, a little girl — ‘My Girl’ and ‘Can’t Get Next to You’ and ‘Just My Imagination’.”
Lee's first three singles were "Special Love", "Pledge of Love", and "Pretty Little Angel Eyes". [3] In the UK, "Pretty Little Angel Eyes" was a minor hit record, peaking at No. 47 in 1961. [4] "Pretty Little Angel Eyes" has been covered by Zombina and the Skeletones and Showaddywaddy. Without Spector's influence, Lee's hits dried up. He went ...
The 60 th anniversary comes on the heels of a very modern milestone: “My Girl” recently notched its one-billionth stream on Spotify, propelling it into an elite class of hits at the world’s ...
The song reached No. 10 on the US Billboard Hot 100; the next year, their tune "If I Should Lose You" (on End Records) made it to No. 62. [2] The group remained active well into the 1960s. Their hit "When We Get Married" was covered by The Intruders in 1970 and by Larry Graham in 1980; "You Gave Me Somebody to Love" was a UK hit for Manfred ...
My Father's Eyes is the second studio album by then-teenage Christian singer-songwriter Amy Grant, released in 1979 on Myrrh Records. My Father's Eyes was a turning point in Grant's career. It gave her her first Christian number-one hit in the title track, as well as the Top Ten Christian hit "Faith Walkin' People."
Father's Day is the perfect time to show Dad a little extra appreciation, whether it be in the form of a thoughtful quote, DIY card, home-cooked meal, or custom playlist filled with only the best ...
"Daddy's Little Girl" is a classic song typically played at white weddings while a bride dances with her father. [ citation needed ] The song's lyrics and music were first written by Robert Harrison Burke and Horace Gerlach [ 1 ] in 1949.