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"Sing for Your Supper" is an American popular song by composer Richard Rodgers and lyricist Lorenz Hart. The song debuted in their 1938 Broadway musical The Boys from Syracuse where it was done as a trio, with Muriel Angelus, Marcy Westcott, and Wynn Murray [1] performing an arrangement specially created for the production by Hugh Martin.
I eat my meals with Sal each day, I eat beef and she eat hay. She isn’t so slow if you want to know, she put the "Buff" in Buffalo Chorus: Low bridge, everybody down, Low bridge, I’ve got the finest mule in town Eats a bale of hay for dinner, and on top of that, my Sal. Tries to drink up all the water in the Erie Canal
10. Divinity Candy. Divinity is a classic, nougat-like candy with a foundation of whipped egg whites, corn syrup, and sugar. Flavors and fillings like dried fruit or chopped nuts make this candy ...
Supper Time" was introduced by Waters as the second song of Act II of the musical. [4] The song followed "Metropolitan Opening" a sketch about the economic woes of patrons at New York's Metropolitan Opera during the recent Great Depression. [4] Waters was depicted on stage standing next to a table in a shack set in the Southern United States. [4]
Unlike Christmas, Thanksgiving doesn’t come with its own set of holiday songs. Honestly, that’s for the best. Honestly, that’s for the best. It broadens the scope of what Thanksgiving music ...
This Is the Day...This Is the Hour...This Is This! is the second studio album by English rock band Pop Will Eat Itself, released on 1 May 1989 by RCA Records.It builds upon the band's 1987 debut Box Frenzy in its extensive usage of sampling, combining influences from punk rock, hip hop, heavy metal, and disco music, with samples and lyrics that reference, among many subjects, pop culture and ...
Early in that century, too, possible evidence of the rhyme's prior existence is suggested by the appearance of the line "Tom would eat meat but wants a knife" in An excellent new Medley (c. 1620), a composite work in which each line incorporates a reference to a contemporary song. [4]
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