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Old Folks (1938 song) Old Folks (A song) Old Folks (Ronnie Milsap and Mike Reid song) Old Folks at Home; Old Friends (Simon & Garfunkel song) The Old Gray Mare; Old Hippie; The Old Laughing Lady; Old Man (song) Old Violin; Ole Bull and Old Dan Tucker; Once Upon a Time (Charles Strouse and Lee Adams song)
See also Category:Songs about mothers and Category:Songs about fathers Pages in category "Songs about grandparents" The following 12 pages are in this category, out of 12 total.
"There's No One Quite Like Grandma" is a song by the Stockport-based primary school choir St Winifred's School Choir, released as a single in November 1980. It was number-one on the UK Singles Chart [ 2 ] from 21 December 1980 to 3 January 1981. [ 3 ]
The widow married the son, and the daughter the old man; the widow was, therefore, mother to her husband's father, consequently grandmother to her own husband. They had a son, to whom she was great-grandmother; now, as the son of a great-grandmother must be either a grandfather or great-uncle, this boy was therefore his own grandfather. N. B.
"Marjorie" is a song by the American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift from her ninth studio album, Evermore (2020). She wrote the track with its producer, Aaron Dessner.A tribute to Swift's late maternal grandmother, the opera singer Marjorie Finlay, the song features bits of advice that Finlay offered to Swift and touches on her guilt over not knowing Finlay to the fullest.
The song is the 12th and final track on the standard version of Ed Sheeran's third studio album ÷ (Divide). In an interview with MTV, Sheeran revealed that the song is about his late maternal grandmother. He said "She was in a hospital near my house where I was making the album so I saw her quite a lot while making the album and she passed ...
Growing up, marriage was never a thing that felt like it was for me. I wanted kids, but worried about what people — and my parents — would think if I was a single mom.
"Grandma's Hands" is a song written by Bill Withers about his grandmother. It was included on his first album Just as I Am (1971), and was released as a single, reaching number 18 on the Best Selling Soul Singles chart and 42 on the Billboard Hot 100. [1] In Canada, it reached No. 37 on the RPM magazine charts.