Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The song was published in 1950. Perry Como recorded the song on August 10, 1950, and it was released on the following single records: In the United States by RCA , as a 78rpm single (catalog number 20-3905-A) and a 45rpm single (catalog number 47-3905-A), with the flip side "Watchin' the Trains Go By".
First released in 1990 on the Reader's Digest album The Best of Perry Como [188] "I Don't Know What He Told You" Giulio Rapetti Elio Cesari Alberto Testa English: Robert I. Allen 1974 [43] Previously recorded in 1973 under the title "He Couldn't Love You More" [189] "I Don't See Me in Your Eyes Anymore" Bennie Benjamin George Weiss: 1949
It should only contain pages that are Perry Como songs or lists of Perry Como songs, ... Patricia (1950 song) Please, Mr. Sun; Prisoner of Love (Russ Columbo song) R.
[29] [30] Just three years after Como's first record for RCA Victor, "Goodbye, Sue", his records were selling so well, the company declared the week of September 2 – 9, 1946 "Perry Como Week". Six new Como songs were released along with six new versions of some of his older songs, as well as re-issuing 14 of his previous hit records.
"Patricia" (1950 song), recorded by Perry Como "Patricia" (Perez Prado song) "Patricia", a song on High as Hope, a 2018 Florence and the Machine album "Patricia", a song written by Art Pepper dedicated to his daughter of the same name.
"Patricia" is a popular song by Pérez Prado with lyrics by Bob Marcucci, published in 1958. The song is best known in an instrumental version by Prado's orchestra that became the last record to ascend to No.1 on the Billboard Jockeys and Top 100 charts, both of which gave way the next week to the then newly-introduced Billboard Hot 100 chart. [1]
Como was born in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, about 20 miles (32 km) southwest of Pittsburgh. [15] He was the seventh of 13 children [16] and the first American-born child of Pietro Como (1877–1945) and Lucia Travaglini (1883–1961), [17] [18] [19] who both emigrated to the US in 1910 from the Abruzzese town of Palena, Italy.
40 Greatest Hits is a greatest hits album by Perry Como. It was released by K-Tel by arrangement with RCA Records in 1975 and peaked at number one on the UK Albums Chart. [1] It was the Christmas number two album that year. [2] The album was not issued in the United States & has never had an official CD release in the UK.