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24 Hours a Day is the third album by the American band the Bottle Rockets, released in 1997. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The band supported the album by touring with John Fogerty and then Todd Snider . [ 3 ] [ 4 ] Bass player Tom V. Ray left the band around the time of the album's release.
It's Love Baby (24 Hours a Day)" is a song written by Ted Jarrett. The song was a number two R&B hit for Louis Brooks and His Hi-Toppers, with vocals performed by Earl Gaines, a friend of Jarrett's. [1] The song, which also charted in 1955 for Hank Ballard's group The Midnighters [2] and Ruth Brown, [3] launched Jarrett's songwriting career.
"Twenty Five Hours a Day" is a song by American rock band The Hooters, which was released in 1993 by MCA Records as the lead single from their fifth studio album, Out of Body (1993). The song was written by Rob Hyman , Eric Bazilian and Jerry Lynn Williams , and produced by Joe Hardy, Bazilian and Hyman.
24 Hours a Day or Twenty-Four Hours a Day may refer to: Twenty-Four Hours A Day, a 1954 book by Richmond Walker; 24 Hours a Day, a 1997 album by the Bottle Rockets "Gotta Find Me a Lover (24 Hours a Day)", a 1969 song by Erma Franklin "24 Hours a Day", a 1976 song by Triumph
The book is named for McVie’s signature song, ... “I just think it’s impossible to work in the band with your spouse. Imagine the tension of living with someone 24 hours a day, on the road ...
"Gotta Find Me a Lover (24 Hours a Day)" is a song released in August of 1969 that became a hit on Billboard's R&B chart, reaching #40, for Erma Franklin.
Side one; No. Title Lyrics Music Length; 1. "24 Hours a Day" Rik Emmett: Rik Emmett: 4:28: 2. "Be My Lover" Rik Emmett: Rik Emmett: 3:20: 3. "Don't Take My Life" Gil Moore
On "24 Hours", A Boogie wit da Hoodie and Lil Durk both "serenade their better halves in a way only these crooners could". [4] The two artists croon about seeing their respective significant others for twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week (forever) on the "melodic" song. [5]