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The Grass Roots also recorded songs written by the group's musicians, which appeared on their albums and the B-sides of many hit singles. As the Grass Roots, they had their first top-10 hit in the summer of 1967 with "Let's Live for Today", an English-language cover version of "Piangi con me", a 1966 hit for the Anglo-Italian quartet The Rokes.
As of 2024 Dateline is a half-hour program broadcast on SBS Television on Tuesdays at 9.30pm, following Insight. All episodes are available to view on SBS On Demand. There are 15 seasons available online. [1] The series runs for 32 episodes a year. Dateline focuses on under-reported stories from around the globe, with a documentary style.
The demo contained a horn section and caught the attention of record producer/engineer Steve Barri, who was looking to produce a song for the Grass Roots that was a "West Coast" version of a Motown-style production. The Grass Roots track was produced/engineered by Steve Barri with the horn section's arrangement by Jimmie Haskell.
It should only contain pages that are The Grass Roots songs or lists of The Grass Roots songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about The Grass Roots songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Part of the series was filmed in the inner west Sydney suburb of Concord.Many external shots of Arcadia waters Council chambers used Concord Council Chambers as a setting. . The Council Chambers themselves (external shots, and the "Site Shed" Scenes, plus a couple of other external scenes) were filmed in a Factory at the end of Mars Road Lane Co
Dateline: “The Day Alissa Disappeared” (9 p.m., NBC) Andrea Canning reports on the disappearance and presumed murder of 17-year-old Alissa Turney, who went missing in Phoenix in 2001.
Note: This recap covers the first half of Lawmen: Bass Reeves’ two-episode premiere. For a recap of Part II, go here. Bass Reeves is known as one of the most storied lawmen in the American West.
Let's Live for Today" was recorded by the Grass Roots with the help of session musicians, including Sloan on lead guitar, and was released as a single in May 1967. [1] [3] The lead vocal on the Grass Roots' recording was sung by the band's bassist Rob Grill [1] and the distinctive "1-2-3-4" count-in before the chorus was sung by guitarist ...