Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
David Daniel Rose (June 15, 1910 – August 23, 1990) [1] was a British-born American songwriter, composer, arranger, pianist, and orchestra leader. His best known compositions were " The Stripper ", " Holiday for Strings ", and "Calypso Melody".
David Rose (standing on the right) in AFRS Radio Show, c. 1946 "The Stripper" is an instrumental composed by David Rose, recorded in 1958 and released four years later.It evinces a jazz influence with especially prominent trombone slides, and evokes the feel of music used to accompany striptease artists.
The same personnel later recorded for the Columbia label as the Hollywood Orchestra. After leaving California, he settled in New York, but continued to record as "Vincent Rose and His Orchestra" for various labels throughout the 1930s. Rose was a prolific songwriter, having published well over 200 songs. His hits included: 1920 "Whispering"
Rose lived in Nashville, Tennessee, but his radio show there did not last long and he went New York City's Tin Pan Alley to be a songwriter. He wrote songs with Ray Whitley, an RKO B-Western film star and author of "Back in the Saddle Again", a collaboration that introduced Rose to country music. He lived for a time with Ray and Kay Whitley in ...
Billy Rose first used the title for a 1926 song that had music by Fred Fisher. Rose wrote the lyric for the earlier song, which also described a man falling in love with a woman who sold china in a five and dime. (The 1931 lyric written largely by Mort Dixon, while using the same idea as the 1926 lyric, is not identical to that of the earlier ...
"Oh Johnny, Oh Johnny, Oh!" is a song composed by Abe Olman (1887–1984), lyricized by Ed Rose (pseudonym for Edward Smackels Jr.; 1875–1935), [3] and published by Forster Music Publisher, Inc. The music was copyrighted 7 February 1917 and the copyright was renewed 29 December 1944.
Blue Rose is the debut studio album by Rosemary Clooney, in collaboration with Duke Ellington and his orchestra, released in mono on Columbia Records, catalogue CL 872.. Although she had appeared on albums before, it had been in the context of either a musical theater or multiple artist re
The film featured Paul Whiteman and his orchestra, [3] while the song, written in waltz time, was composed by Mabel Wayne, with lyrics by Billy Rose. [4] [5] Though the lyrics refer to the city of Monterrey in "Old Mexico", [6] the song title was misspelled, leading to popular references to the city of Monterey, California. [7]