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A popular cover version was recorded by Harpers Bizarre on their 1967 debut album Feelin' Groovy, [4] reaching No. 13 on the Billboard Hot 100 and No. 4 on the Easy Listening chart. [17] This version – which at 2:34 expanded on the Simon & Garfunkel original's running time, adding an a cappella choral section – was arranged by Leon Russell ...
Feelin' Groovy is the debut album by the American sunshine pop band Harpers Bizarre, released in 1967. The record peaked at #108 on Billboard's Top 200 Albums chart in May 1967. Over on the Hot 100 Singles chart, "The 59th Street Bridge Song (Feelin' Groovy)" peaked at #13 in February 1967 and "Come to the Sunshine" peaked at #37 the following May.
Feelin' Groovy: The Best of Harpers Bizarre (Warner Archives, 1997) The Complete Singles Collection (1965–1970) ( Now Sounds , 2016) The Big Beat Records compilation albums Dance with Me: The Autumn Teen Sound (1994) and Someone to Love: The Birth of the San Francisco Sound (1996) contain the Tikis' two 45s and several previously unreleased ...
Image credits: Images That Could Be Album Covers Elden's parents were reportedly paid $200 for the baby's image to be used on Nirvana's album cover. The shoot took a few seconds and the album went ...
Instead it featured recordings by the duo originally released between 1964 and 1972 from all 5 studio albums and every studio single, excepting The Dangling Conversation and Fakin' It, whilst adding the non-single title track from their first album Wednesday Morning, 3 A.M., as well as "Song for the Asking", the last track on their final album ...
Art Garfunkel knows well the sound of silence. “I’ve crossed Europe, I’ve crossed America. I crossed Japan first,” says the higher-voiced half of the 100 million-selling Simon & Garfunkel ...
The Essential Simon & Garfunkel is the second 2-CD compilation album of greatest hits by Simon & Garfunkel, released by Columbia Records on October 14, 2003.. This two-disc anthology was released to coincide with Simon & Garfunkel's 2003 reunion tour.
Some album covers prove controversial due to their titles alone. When the Sex Pistols released Never Mind The Bollocks…in 1977, a record shop owner in Nottingham named Chris Searle was arrested ...