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"Pride and Joy" is a song by American singer, guitarist and songwriter Stevie Ray Vaughan and his backing band Double Trouble, released in late 1983 by Epic Records. It lists Vaughan as the writer, but actually it is rewritten from a 1962 record called "I Go Into Orbit" by Johnny Acey.
"Pride and Joy" is a 1963 single by Marvin Gaye, [1] released on the Tamla label. The single, co-written by William "Mickey" Stevenson , Gaye and Norman Whitfield , and produced by Stevenson, was considered to be a tribute to Gaye's then-girlfriend, Anna Gordy . [ 2 ]
Pride and Joy is a music video/live compilation by Stevie Ray Vaughan. It was the original video collection, spanning all of the music videos made from 1983-1989, plus a live track from MTV 's Mardi Gras celebration in February 1987.
Released in September 1963 as the follow-up to Gaye's top ten hit, "Pride and Joy", the song peaked at No. 22 on the Hot 100 on 28 December 1963 and also became one of Gaye's earlier international hit singles, making a buzz in the United Kingdom, primarily among dance clubs in London and northern England (particularly Leeds), and also charted ...
"Pride & Joy" (comics), a 2003 Runaways story arc; Pride & Joy, a 2003 comic book mini-series by Garth Ennis and John Higgins; Pride & Joy, a 1995 American sitcom "Pride & Joy" , a 2016 television episode; Pride and Joy: Children's Portraits in the Netherlands, 1500–1700, a 2000–2001 art exhibit
A music video for the song was not released until 1994, when the Hughes brothers co-directed a video of the song for the reissue of What's Going On. The video was shot in Harlem over the course of five days, featuring visuals of poverty and inner-city depression. The brothers also filmed firefighters putting out a fire, claiming to police to ...
"Pride" is a song written by Wayne Walker and Irene Stanton. It was first recorded by American country music artist Ray Price , whose version became a major hit. Price's version was released on January 7, 1962, where it peaked at No. 5 on Billboard's Hot Country charts.
"Soldier's Joy" is a fiddle tune, classified as a reel or country dance. [1] It is popular in the American fiddle canon, in which it is touted as "an American classic" [ 1 ] but traces its origin to Scottish fiddling traditions. [ 2 ]