Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
I am a pretty little Dutch girl, As pretty as I can be, be, be, And all the boys in the baseball team Go crazy over me, me, me. My boy friend’s name is Fatty, He comes from the Senoratti, With turned-up toes and a pimple on his nose, And this is how the story goes: Variation 1. I am a pretty little Dutch girl As pretty as I can be
Johnny McCauley (23 April 1925 – 22 March 2012) was an Irish singer-songwriter, born in Myroe, near Limavady, County Londonderry in Northern Ireland. As a young adult, he moved to London and in 1953 began singing professionally with his band, the Westernaires, at the Galtymore Club, Cricklewood.
First mentioned in Tommy Thumb's Pretty Song Book. Little Boy Blue: England 1744 [57] First mentioned in Tommy Thumb's Pretty Song Book. Little Jack Horner 'Little Jack Horner sat in a corner' Great Britain 1791 [58] The earliest surviving English edition is from 1791. Little Miss Muffet 'Little Miss Muffet sat on a tuffet' United Kingdom 1805 [59]
Ten Little Indians; There Was a Crooked Man; There Was a Man in Our Town; There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly; There Was an Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe; There Was an Old Woman Who Lived Under a Hill; There's a Hole in My Bucket; This Is the House That Jack Built; This Little Piggy; This Old Man; Three Blind Mice; The Three Jovial ...
A Pretty Girl Milking Her Cow (Cailin Deas Crúite na mBó in the Irish language) is a traditional 18th-century Irish ballad. The English version is attributed to Thomas Moore (1779–1852). [ 1 ] Originally sung in Irish Gaelic, the song was popular through the early 20th century.
Yelawolf contributed vocals to "Pretty Little Girl" in 2012. Singer-songwriter Simon Wilcox is credited with songwriting and backing vocals on "Bottom of the Ocean", from the deluxe edition of California (2017). The band collaborated with DJ and producer Steve Aoki, pictured above, for "Why Are We So Broken", in 2018. [3]
In the 1934 collection American Ballads and Folk Songs, ethnomusicologists John and Alan Lomax give a version titled "All the Pretty Little Horses" and ending: 'Way down yonder / In de medder / There's a po' lil lambie, / De bees an' de butterflies / Peckin' out its eyes, / De po' lil thing cried, "Mammy!"' [5] The Lomaxes quote Scarborough as ...
"Pretty Girls Everywhere" is a song written by Eugene Church and Thomas Williams. [3] The song was first a hit for the American singer Eugene Church with his group The Fellows (including session drummer Earl Palmer [4]) in 1958. Church's recording for Class records was his most popular reaching No. 6 R&B and No. 36 Pop in the US. [5]