Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Suzy Snowflake" is a song written by Sid Tepper and Roy C. Bennett, made famous by Rosemary Clooney in 1951 and released as a 78 RPM record by Columbia Records, MJV-123. Suzy is a snowflake playfully personified. It is commonly regarded as a Christmas song, although it makes no mention of the holiday. The child-oriented lyrics celebrate the ...
Carla Olson and Mick Taylor recorded two versions of "Winter". One is on Olson's The Ring of Truth album [5] and the other appears on Too Hot For Snakes Plus. (One disc was a re-release of the Olson/Taylor Too Hot for Snakes live album [6] and the second was thirteen studio tracks featuring the two from Olson's various solo albums plus one song from the Barry Goldberg album Stoned Again which ...
The song was covered by Ronan Keating on his album "Winter Songs" The song was used in the season six episode "Christmas Through Your Eyes" of The Vampire Diaries. The song was used in TnT's Snowpiercer in Season 2 Episode 9. The song was sung by actor Sam Otto, portraying character John Osweiller.
Let It Snow!", also known as simply "Let It Snow", [1] is a song written by lyricist Sammy Cahn and composer Jule Styne in July 1945 in Hollywood, California, during a heatwave as Cahn and Styne imagined cooler conditions. [2] [3] The song was first recorded that fall by Vaughn Monroe, was released just after Thanksgiving, and became a hit by ...
"I'm Gonna Be Warm This Winter" was one of seventeen Connie Francis hits which the singer remade for her 1989 album Where the Hits Are a Roger Hawkins production recorded for Malaco Records at Muscle Shoals Sound Studios. "I'm Gonna Be Warm This Winter" was the lowest-charting hit remade for the album with the exception of "If I Didn't Care" (#22).
"Winter" was the fourth single released from Amos' debut studio album, Little Earthquakes. It was released through EastWest Records on March 9, 1992, in the United Kingdom and on May 18, 1992, in Australia. [1] [2] In North America, it was issued through Atlantic Records the same year. The song also appears on Amos' 2003 compilation, Tales of a ...
A later version of "Winter Wonderland" (which was printed in 1947) included a "new children's lyric" that transformed it "from a romantic winter interlude to a seasonal song about playing in the snow". The snowman mentioned in the song's bridge was changed from Parson Brown to a circus clown, and the promises the couple made in the final verse ...
"School Days" is an American popular song written in 1907 by Will D. Cobb and Gus Edwards. Its subject is of a mature couple looking back sentimentally on their childhood together in primary school. [1] The song was featured in a Broadway show of the same name, the first in a series of