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Hopscotch Lollipop Sunday Surprise is a studio album by The Frogs, released in 2001. Although brushing on satirical homoerotic and religious themes, the album chiefly consists of serious love songs. Musically, the album features heavy electric guitars, acoustic guitars, and industrial/electronic beats mixed.
Song title Songwriter(s) Length 1 Hopscotch Victor Bailey, Charles Bell, George Howard: 05:22 2 Only Here for a Minute Dean Gant, George Howard 05:21 3 Baby, Come to Me Narada Michael Walden, Jeffrey Cohen 06:34 4 Interlude George Howard 00:50 5 Love and Understanding George Duke, George Howard 05:20 6 Everything I Miss at Home
The Vermilion, Chris Jonas' The Sun Spits Cherries featuring Myra Melford, 2001, Hopscotch; Ensembles Unsynchronized, Chris Jonas Quintet, 2000, NewSonic Records; The Sun Spits Cherries, Chris Jonas’ The Sun Spits Cherries, 1999, Hopscotch Records; Child King Dictator Fool, Great Circle Saxophone Quartet, 1997, New World Records
Sun arranges a colourful pattern of cakes for a "meet-your-neighbours" party. Charli plays hopscotch on a court of flowers laid out on the ground. Kellie and Chats try to decode the language of mice for a special "talk-like-a-mouse" day. Charli walks around in different ways.
Mildred Grace Adair (August 5, 1895 – April 30, 1943), later Mildred Grace Adair Stagg, was an American composer, pianist and teacher. [2] Her compositions were mostly for piano solo, although she also wrote vocal and organ works.
"Hop-Scotch Polka (Scotch Hot)" is a popular song based on the Billy Whitlock composition "Scotch Hot", with new lyrics added by Gene Rayburn and Carl Sigman. The song was published on July 6, 1949, by Cromwell Music , Inc., and was soon recorded by several artists, including Art Mooney for M-G-M Records , Guy Lombardo and His Royal Canadians ...
"Chase the Sun" is a song by Italian electronic music group Planet Funk with vocals from Finnish singer Auli Kokko. The melody is taken from Ennio Morricone 's tune "Alla luce del giorno" (English: "In Daylight" ) from the score of the 1969 film Metti, una sera a cena ("English: Think About a Night at Dinner" ). [ 2 ]
The song's success was arguably a result of positive public response to the group's alternative musical fare and fresh new sound. [4] The song appears in the 2014 Beach Boys biopic Love & Mercy during a scene in which Murry Wilson disrupts a recording session for Caroline No with the song, causing friction and panic amongst the group. [5]