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"Ragtime Cowboy Joe" was the radio show theme song for New York City's long running, award-winning public radio show, Cowboy Joe's Radio Ranch (1976–1988), hosted by Paul Aaron, New York's Cowboy Joe. During one of his radio shows Paul Aaron had the elder Joe Abrahams (the original Cowboy Joe) as a special guest.
"Ragtime Cowboy Joe" [12] 16 "Kate (Have I Come Too Early, Too Late)" 7 "An Apple Blossom Wedding" 9 1948 "Now Is the Hour (Maori Farewell Song)" 8 "Just Because" 20 "Put 'em in a Box, Tie 'em with a Ribbon, and Throw 'em in the Deep Blue Sea" 23 "(I'd Like to Get You on a) Slow Boat to China" 6 "Dainty Brenda Lee" 27 1949 "Candy Kisses" 20 ...
He was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, the son of Nicholas (Nick) Roberts, a well-known clown who became the proprietor of one of the country's leading touring pantomime companies, and his French-born wife Augustine C. Zahn. Bob Roberts is assumed to have traveled widely with his father's shows in his youth, and indeed for the 1880 census when he was 9-years-old, his mother and brother were found ...
His biggest success, "Ragtime Cowboy Joe", was a pop hit for Bob Roberts (1912), Pinky Tomlin (1939), Eddy Howard (1947), Jo Stafford (1949), and David Seville and the Chipmunks (1959). Some of his songs were written for his wife, the vaudeville performer Belle Baker, whom he married in 1919. [2] [3]
1993: The Chipmunks Sing-Alongs (two albums: Ragtime Cowboy Joe and Working on the Railroad) 1994: Here's Looking at Me! 35 Years of Chipmunk Classics; 1994: A Very Merry Chipmunk; 1995: When You Wish Upon a Chipmunk; 1996: Club Chipmunk: The Dance Mixes; 1998: The A-Files: Alien Songs; 1999: Greatest Hits: Still Squeaky After All These Years ...
Ragtime Cowboy Joe is a 1940 American Western film directed by Ray Taylor and written by Sherman L. Lowe. The film stars Johnny Mack Brown, Fuzzy Knight, Nell O'Day, Dick Curtis, Lynn Merrick and Walter Soderling. The film was released on September 20, 1940, by Universal Pictures. [1] [2] [3]
In 1912, he collaborated with Maurice Abrahams in composing music for the song Ragtime Cowboy Joe. Journalist L. Wolfe Gilbert criticized Muir's use of the Catholic rosary in the name of a ragtime piece, which he considered sacrilegious. Muir confronted Gilbert in person and, after a heated argument, challenged Gilbert to write a song with him.
Grant Clarke (May 14, 1891, Akron, Ohio – May 16, 1931, California) was an American songwriter.. Clarke moved to New York City early in his career, where he worked as an actor and a staff writer for comedians.