Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is a comprehensive list of songs written or performed by pop duo the Carpenters, featuring Karen and Richard Carpenter. This list includes official studio albums, live albums, solo albums, and notable compilations that feature rare or unreleased material.
"Top of the World" is a 1972 song written and composed by Richard Carpenter and John Bettis and first recorded by American pop duo Carpenters. It was a Billboard Hot 100 No. 1 hit for the duo for two consecutive weeks in 1973. It also became Carpenters' second number one and tenth top-ten single in the Billboard Hot 100.
In December 2011, Billboard began a Holiday Songs chart with 50 positions that monitors the last five weeks of each year to "rank the top holiday hits of all eras using the same methodology as the Hot 100, blending streaming, airplay, and sales data", [46] and in 2013 the number of positions on the chart was doubled, resulting in the Holiday ...
It should only contain pages that are The Carpenters songs or lists of The Carpenters songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about The Carpenters songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_songs_by_the_Carpenters&oldid=185467900"https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_songs_by_the
Showdown in Little Tokyo - "Top of the World" by Carpenters; The Spirit of '76 - "Top of the World" by Carpenters; Shrek Forever After - "Top of the World" by Carpenters; Taps - "Slow Hand" by Pointer Sisters; The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift - "Top of the World" by Carpenters; This is It - "Human Nature" by Michael Jackson
The album was the only Oceania-exclusive compilation of the Carpenters' material released by Festival Records.Although the album is not specifically a "greatest hits" collection, several of the tracks did not reach the charts in either Australia or New Zealand: "Ticket to Ride"; "This Masquerade", as it was not a single; and "Those Good Old Dreams".
The medley starts with the Carpenters' original song "Yesterday Once More". Tony Peluso, the Carpenters' guitarist who made his debut on the 1972 album A Song for You, is heard as a radio DJ throughout the medley, which includes such songs as "The End of the World", "Dead Man's Curve", "Johnny Angel" and "One Fine Day".