Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Today's the Day" is a pop song written and recorded by American singer-songwriter Pink to serve as the new theme song for season 13 of The Ellen DeGeneres Show. [1] The song was co-written and produced by Greg Kurstin. It was released to digital retailers as an official single on September 10, 2015, through RCA Records and Warner Bros. [2]
"Today's the Day" was released as the album's lead single in April 1976 and it peaked at #23 on the Billboard Hot 100, [3] making it the most successful single from the album. The final Top 40 hit for America as a trio, "Today's the Day" was also America's third and final #1 on the Billboard Easy Listening chart which it topped for two weeks. [4]
In 1972, a version of the song from the album Godspell (1971) by the original off-Broadway cast was released as a single in the US, and attributed simply to the group name "Godspell". Robin Lamont was the lead singer, uncredited. "Day by Day" spent 14 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at the #13 position on July 29, 1972. [5]
from the album Day by Day "Do Re Mi" Richard Rodgers: Oscar Hammerstein II) July 14, 1964 (with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album With a Smile and a Song "Dream a Little Dream of Me" Officially credited to Fabian Andre and Wilbur Schwandt; claimed by Milton Adolphus in some sources Gus Kahn: August 23, 1957 from the album ...
OK, Grease has a bunch of bops, but this closing number sung by Sandy (Olivia Newton-John) and Danny (John Travolta) is by far our favorite musical love song. Listen Now 24.
In 2018, fans were surprised when Rita Ora was seen noticeably lip-syncing her song, "Let You Love Me." Following the event, John Legend came to her defense on X, sharing the "fun fact" about why ...
The duo are set to star in Song Sung Blue as Claire and Mike and Claire Sardina, a real-life married couple from Milwaukee who form a Neil Diamond tribute band called Lightning & Thunder.
Richard Armstrong Whiting (November 12, 1891 – February 19, 1938) [1] was an American composer of popular songs, including the standards "Hooray for Hollywood", "Ain't We Got Fun?" and "On the Good Ship Lollipop".