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b/w "Charlie Was a Boxer" (from The Four Aces Sing) 43 26 — "I Only Know I Love You" / 22 38 — The Four Aces Sing "Dreamer" 86 43 — Non-album track "You Can't Run Away from It" / 20 — — The Four Aces Sing "Friendly Persuasion (Thee I Love)" 45 10 29 Hits from Hollywood "Someone To Love" / 47 — — The Four Aces Sing "Written on the ...
Pages in category "The Four Aces songs" ... (Frank Loesser and Hoagy Carmichael song) Heart of My Heart; I. I Only Know I Love You; L. Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing ...
The quoted line, "Heart of My Heart", so longed for in the 1926 song, begins the chorus of "The Story of the Rose", written by Andrew Mack (1863–1931) in 1899. [1] Mack was a popular American actor, singer and comedian who reportedly first sang this song in an 1899 show at the Academy of Music in New York City.
The Four Aces biggest hit was "Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing", [4] which was the theme to the 1955 film starring William Holden and Jennifer Jones. The song was a number one hit for four weeks, and it also won the Academy Award for best song.
"Tell Me Why" is a popular song written by Marty Gold with the lyrics by Al Alberts. The song was published in 1951. The first version of the song released was a recording by Jerry Gray and his orchestra, released by Decca company in 1951, as catalog number 27621, with the flip side "Restringing the Pearls", [1] by Skeets McDonald (released by Capitol Records as catalog number 1957, with the ...
The melody was written by Jule Styne with lyrics by Sammy Cahn. [1] It was written for the romance film, Three Coins in the Fountain and refers to the act of throwing a coin into the Trevi Fountain in Rome while making a wish. Each of the film's three stars (Clifton Webb, Dorothy McGuire, and Jean Peters) performs this act.
There Goes My Heart may refer to: There Goes My Heart, 1938 "There Goes My Heart" (The Mavericks song), 1994 "There Goes My Heart" (Lisa Stansfield song), 2014; There Goes My Heart Again, 1989, a song recorded by American country music artist Holly Dunn
The song was initially used only as background music in the film, later the words were sung to make the song eligible for the Best Original Song category of the Academy Awards. [5] An orchestral version of "Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing" accompanies the title sequence of the film, while a vocal version performed by a chorus is played at the end.