Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Official Audio. "These Boots Are Made for Walkin'" on YouTube. " These Boots Are Made for Walkin'" is a hit song written by Lee Hazlewood and recorded by American singer Nancy Sinatra. It charted on January 22, 1966, [ 8 ] and reached No. 1 in the United States Billboard Hot 100 and in the UK Singles Chart. [ 7 ]
Boots is the debut studio album by Nancy Sinatra, released by Reprise Records on March 15, 1966. [1] Arranged and conducted by Billy Strange, the album was produced by Lee Hazlewood. [3] It peaked at number 5 on the Billboard 200 chart. [4] It includes "These Boots Are Made for Walkin'", [1] which topped the Billboard Hot 100 chart [5] and the ...
"Knockin' da Boots" is the debut single by R&B group H-Town, taken from their debut album Fever for da Flavor. The song became one of the biggest R&B singles of 1993 according to the Billboard charts, where it peaked at number three on the Hot 100 for seven weeks, and also topped the R&B chart for four weeks, [1] and it helped win the band a Soul Train Music Award for Best R&B/Soul or Rap New ...
"I Can Hear Music" is a song written by Jeff Barry, Ellie Greenwich and Phil Spector [2] for American girl group the Ronettes (credited as The Ronettes Featuring Veronica) in 1966. This version spent one week on the Billboard Pop chart at number 100. [ 3 ]
The song rose as high as number eleven on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart (then known as "Hot Country Singles & Tracks) and became a number one country hit in Canada; the song became Twain's first entry on the Billboard Hot 100 when it was released as a double a-side single with her later single "Any Man of Mine" in June 1995, reaching ...
In partnership with Nashville Songwriters Association International, the "Story Behind the Song" video interview series features Nashville-connected songwriters discussing one of their compositions.
Thirsty Boots. "Thirsty Boots" is a civil-rights-era folksong by American singer-songwriter Eric Andersen that first appeared on his 1966 album 'Bout Changes 'n' Things. According to the album's liner notes, the song "was written to a civil rights worker-friend. Having never gone down to Mississippi myself, I wrote the song about coming back."
Content. The song was written by Ashley Gorley, Michael Hardy and Josh Osborne. "Sand in My Boots" is a nostalgic ballad about a lost love, [2] describes a worn out cowboy, weathering lost love and fading memories of drinking with that girl who could've been the one. [3]