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In 2011, the brothers supported earthquake victims in New Zealand when they joined the New Zealand Red Cross and Judy Seale International to raise support through live auctions. [57] In 2016, the Bellamy Brothers partnered with the Susan G. Komen Foundation to release a video for "Let Your Love Flow." They supported the foundation's breast ...
Label: Bellamy Brothers Records — Take Me Home: Release date: 1994; Label: Bellamy Brothers Records — Sons of Beaches: Release date: 1995; Label: Bellamy Brothers Records — Tropical Christmas: Release date: 1996; Label: Bellamy Brothers Records — Dancin' Release date: 1996; Label: Bellamy Brothers Records — Over the Line: Release date ...
It should only contain pages that are The Bellamy Brothers songs or lists of The Bellamy Brothers songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about The Bellamy Brothers songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
"If I Said You Had a Beautiful Body ..." derived its double entendre title from a Groucho Marx line. Songwriter David Bellamy told country music journalist Tom Roland that he regularly watched Marx's program, You Bet Your Life, where Marx sometimes used the quote while interviewing an attractive female contestant, then shake his cigar and raise his eyebrows to elicit a reaction. [3]
Greatest Hits Volume Two is the second compilation album by American country music duo The Bellamy Brothers. It was released in 1986 via MCA and Curb Records . [ 1 ]
Reality Check is the fourteenth studio album by American country music group The Bellamy Brothers. ... This page was last edited on 29 April 2023, at 04:37 (UTC).
Greatest Hits Volume III is the third compilation album by American country music duo The Bellamy Brothers. It was released in 1989 via MCA and Curb Records . The album includes the singles "Hillbilly Hell", " You'll Never Be Sorry " and " The Center of My Universe ".
"Sugar Daddy" is a song written by David Bellamy, and recorded by American country music duo The Bellamy Brothers. It was released in January 1980 as the first single from the album You Can Get Crazy. The song was the second of ten number one singles on the country chart for The Bellamy Brothers.