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"Remember Then" is a pop song written by Tony Powers and Beverly Ross, and first recorded in 1962 by doo-wop vocal group The Earls. Original copies of The Earls' version, on the Old Town label, show only Powers as the writer, while some later versions give a writing or co-writing credit to record producer Stan Vincent. BMI lists all three as co ...
The Earls, often credited as Larry Chance and the Earls, is an American popular music group formed in The Bronx, New York. In a career spanning over 60 years they formed in the early 1960s, though their roots can be traced back to 1957 in a group called the High-Hatters.
Albums included Remember Me Baby, The Earls: Today, The Earls – LIVE, Earl Change, and Streets of the Bronx. Chance also had a short-lived solo career in the late 1960s, [ 5 ] but as the oldies revival scene started a strong run in the early 1970s and 1980s, the Earls became one of the most requested groups in the doo-wop genre and Chance ...
Remember When, a 1974 film with a screenplay by Herman Raucher; Remember When: Reflections on a Changing Australia, a 2003 book by Bruce Elder; Remember When, a 2003 novel by Nora Roberts writing as J.D. Robb "Remember When" (The Sopranos), an episode of The Sopranos; Remember When (radio program), a defunct Philippine radio music program
Pussy Riot Siberia is music to be experienced live. After witnessing Saturday’s performance, Fairey noted, “That was more abrasive than Suicide and more droning than the Melvins, and I love ...
The song was recorded by Roy Orbison as the B-side of "Crying" in 1961, and was re-recorded by Mickey Gilley and Charly McClain in 1984 when it reached no.5 on the US country music chart. [13] [14] She also co-wrote "Remember Then" with Tony Powers; the song was first recorded by the Earls in 1962.
The Earls released a version of the song on their 1963 album, Remember Me Baby. [10] Brenda Lee released a version of the song as the B-side to her 1963 single "I Wanna Be Around". [11] It was featured in her album, ..."Let Me Sing". Jean DuShon released a version of the song as a single in 1966, but it did not chart. [12]
Many of the long-term repercussions of 9/11 are still with us today — from the wars, government departments and the surveillance state that were started because of it, to the hastily discarded ...