Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Tom Tom Club is the debut studio album by American new wave band Tom Tom Club, released in 1981, containing the UK hit singles "Wordy Rappinghood", which reached No. 7 in June 1981 and "Genius of Love", which reached No. 65 in October of the same year.
Tom Tom Club is an American new wave band founded in 1981 by husband-and-wife team Chris Frantz and Tina Weymouth and as a side project from Talking Heads. [3] Their best known songs include the UK top 10 hit "Wordy Rappinghood" and the US top 40 hit "Genius of Love", both from their 1981 debut album, and a cover of The Drifters' "Under the Boardwalk" that reached the UK top 30.
Tom Tom Club (album) W. Warm Leatherette (album) This page was last edited on 22 December 2024, at 09:55 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
The Good, The Bad, and the Funky is the fifth studio album of the Tom Tom Club. A remix of the album's second track, "Who Feelin' It?", was featured in the 2000 dark comedy American Psycho as the "Philip's Psycho Mix".
Frantz’s deliciously smack-talking memoir, Remain in Love: Talking Heads, Tom Tom Club, Tina, was published in 2020 by St. Martin’s Press.His unfiltered and unflattering descriptions of ...
The Tom Tom Club's musicians were: Wally Badarou, Tyrone Downie, Chris Frantz, Roddy Frantz, Rupert Hine, Raymond Jones, Steve Scales, Steven Stanley, Alex Weir; and sisters Lani, Laura and Tina Weymouth. The album was released on compact disc for the first time on May 19, 2009, as a part of a two-CD deluxe package with the band's first album ...
Jim Jarmusch is another renowned filmmaker who befriended Waits in the ‘80s and has cast the singer in several features over the years, from 1986’s Down by Law to 2019’s The Dead Don’t Die ...
"Wordy Rappinghood" is the debut single by American new wave band Tom Tom Club, from their 1981 self-titled debut album. It uses part of a traditional Moroccan children's song and game, "A Ram Sam Sam", made popular by the 1971 Rolf Harris recording. In the United States, the song topped the Billboard Disco Top 80 chart along with "Genius of Love".