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"Laughing" is a popular song by Canadian rock band The Guess Who. It peaked at #1 on the Canadian Singles Chart for a single week [2] and at #10 on the United States' Billboard Hot 100, becoming the band's second single to reach the Top 10 on the latter. [3]
"The Laughing Song" was number one for ten weeks from April to June 1891, while "The Whistling Coon" was number one for five weeks in July and August 1891. Johnson was the first African American to appear on the pop chart, and his song on the chart was the first to have been written by an African American. [7]
"Laughing Song" is a poem published in 1789 by the English poet William Blake. This poem is one of nineteen in Blake's collection Songs of Innocence.
"Reflections Laughing" is a song by Canadian singer-songwriter the Weeknd, American rapper and singer Travis Scott, and English indie rock band Florence and the Machine. It was released through XO and Republic Records as the ninth track from the Weeknd's sixth studio album, Hurry Up Tomorrow , on January 31, 2025.
The_Laughing_Song_(1898).webm (WebM audio/video file, Opus, length 2 min 24 s, 0 × 0 pixels, 151 kbps overall, file size: 2.58 MB) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
"The Laughing Policeman" is a music hall song recorded by British artist Charles Penrose, initially published under the pseudonym Charles Jolly in 1922.It is an adaptation of "The Laughing Song" first recorded in 1890 by American singer George W. Johnson with the same tune and form, but the subject was changed from a "dandy darky" to a policeman.
Bob Bryar, former drummer for My Chemical Romance, had tanks of nitrous oxide next to him when he was found dead, according to reports. TMZ reported that Bryar's autopsy report — obtained from ...
Mein Herr Marquis", sometimes called "Adele's Laughing Song", is an aria for soprano with choral accompaniment from act 2 of the operetta Die Fledermaus by Johann Strauss II. It appears in many anthologies of music for soprano singers, and is frequently performed in recitals.