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My World is a studio album by country music singer Eddy Arnold.It was released in 1965 by RCA Victor. [2]The album debuted on Billboard magazine's Top Country Albums chart on October 9, 1965, held the No. 1 spot for 17 weeks, and remained on the chart for a total of 44 weeks.
"Days Gone By", a song from the 1973 Joe Walsh album The Smoker You Drink, ... a 1965 song by Eddy Arnold "Days Gone By", a song from the 1993 Godstar album Sleeper
Richard Edward Arnold (May 15, 1918 – May 8, 2008) was an American country music singer. He was a Nashville sound (country/popular music) innovator of the late 1950s, and scored 147 songs on the Billboard country music charts, second only to George Jones .
The World of Eddy Arnold: 1968 "Here Comes the Rain, Baby" b/w "The World I Used to Know" (from The Everlovin' World of Eddy Arnold) 4 74 20 — 46 — — Non-album track "It's Over" b/w "No Matter Whose Baby You Are" 4 74 15 15 68 — — The Romantic World of Eddy Arnold "Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye" b/w "Apples, Raisins and Roses" 1 84 6 1 ...
The song's lyrics contains the titles of Arnold's best-known songs to that time, intertwined to affirm a man's dedication to his significant other. Included in the song's lyrics are the names of 10 of the 17 number one hits he had achieved on the Billboard country charts through late 1952, when Arnold recorded and released the song.
Anytime is an album by American country music singer Eddy Arnold. It was released in 1956 by RCA Victor. [1] With the advent of long-playing albums, RCA reissued an expanded version of Arnold's 1952 two-record set. The album collects 12 of Arnold's hit from his early years, including seven records that were number one hits. [2]
"The Echo of Your Footsteps" is a country music song written by Jenny Lou Carson and sung by Eddy Arnold, billed as "Eddy Arnold, The Tennessee Plowboy and His Guitar". It was released in 1949 on the RCA Victor label (catalog no. 21-0051-A). The "B" side was "One Kiss Too Many".
"One Kiss Too Many" is a song written by Eddy Arnold, Steve Nelson and Ed Nelson Jr. [4] The song was first performed by Arnold and reached number one on the Most-Played Juke Box Folk Records chart (one of the forerunners of the modern Hot Country Songs chart) in 1949, spending three non-consecutive weeks in the top spot. It was one of five ...