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The song is the official club song of Birmingham City F.C., adopted during the club's run to the 1955–56 FA Cup final. On a coach to Highbury for the quarter-final tie at Arsenal in March 1956, the players sang songs to ease the tension, and manager Arthur Turner asked Scottish winger Alex Govan for his choice; he started singing "Keep Right On", and the players were still singing on arrival ...
The song was a hit, spending fourteen weeks in the Billboard R&B chart where it reached number six in 1958. [6] After a six-year run of successful singles, Little Walter only had one charting single after "Key to the Highway". The song is included on several Little Walter compilation albums, including His Best.
The music video for "End of the Road" was directed by American music video director, film director and VJ Lionel C. Martin. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] It was made in both black-and-white and colors, featuring Boyz II Men performing the song while sitting on chairs in a room, standing outside a train station, or walking in a hallway.
Body Like a Back Road; Bright Side of the Road ... Ease on Down the Road; G. Goin' Down the Road (song) Going Down the Road Feeling Bad; Goodbye Yellow Brick Road ...
Songs in the Key of X peaked at No. 47 on the Billboard 200 album sales chart after its release. The album's title is a play on the title of Stevie Wonder's 1976 album Songs in the Key of Life. The album has received positive reviews from critics, with one review describing it as "easily the most ambitious record ever assembled for a TV ...
The single was released in December, 1956 as Sun 259 with the Matrix # U-230 as by Jerry Lee Lewis And His Pumping Piano. The song was published by Knox Music, Inc., which released sheet music for the song. [5] In Canada, the song was released as a 45 single in 1956 as Quality K1590 with "Crazy Arms" as the flip side. [6]
The DVD of Every Road Leads Back to You was released by Image Entertainment in 2002. The concert is presented in 18 tracks with the first listed as "Opening" and the last as "End Credits". The 16 tracks in between form the body of the concert.
"The Road" was released on the 1988 album, Live: The Road, where it was the song recorded in the studio (and one of the two songs on the album never before released).). However, prior to the release of Live: The Road, "The Road" saw single release in Britain (but not A