Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Baby Mine" is a song from the 1941 Disney animated feature Dumbo. The music is by Frank Churchill, with lyrics by Ned Washington. Betty Noyes recorded the vocals for the original film version. In the film, Dumbo's mother, Mrs. Jumbo, an elephant locked in a circus wagon, cradles her baby Dumbo with her trunk while this lullaby is sung. It is ...
His most famous song is probably "Harry Hippie", a song recorded and released by Womack in 1973. After beating a cocaine addiction in 2004, Ford started recording again. He was a recluse at that time, but L-P Anderson of Sweden's Sonic Magazine managed to track him down in his California trailer home in April 2006. [3]
"Baby Mine", a popular song published in 1901 "Baby Mine" (song) , a song from the 1941 Disney film Dumbo and also in the 2019 Tim Burton remake "Baby Mine", a version of traditional blues song "Crawdad Song" from the 1963 album Bill Henderson with the Oscar Peterson Trio
"Sweet Baby" is a song by American singer Macy Gray featuring American singer Erykah Badu, released as the lead single from Gray's second studio album, The Id (2001). The single was released to radio in July 2001 before being released physically in September. [ 2 ]
"Sweet Baby" is a song by American musicians George Duke and Stanley Clarke. It was released in 1981 as the first single of their collaborative debut album The Clarke/Duke Project . Reaching a peak position of No. 19 on the US Billboard Hot 100 , the single remained on the chart for a total of twenty weeks.
"Sweet Child O' Mine" is a song by American rock band Guns N' Roses, released on their debut studio album, Appetite for Destruction (1987). In the United States, the song was released in June 1988 as the album's first single, topping the US Billboard Hot 100 chart and becoming the band's only US number-one single.
Again, however, these songs enjoyed little success and by 1961, the group decided to stop recording music. [ 1 ] "Eddie My Love" was also recorded by The Chordettes and The Fontane Sisters , both of which also made the chart in 1956, [ 1 ] and was parodied as "Freddy My Love" in the musical Grease .
Donnie Elbert (May 25, 1936 – January 26, 1989) was an American soul singer and songwriter, who had a prolific career from the mid-1950s to the late 1970s. His U.S. hits included "Where Did Our Love Go?" (1971), and his reputation as a Northern soul artist in the UK was secured by "A Little Piece of Leather", a performance highlighting his powerful falsetto voice.