Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"The Old Lamp-Lighter" is a popular song. The music was written by Nat Simon, ... On that album Björk teams up with the jazz trio of Guðmundur Ingólfsson ...
"The Old Lamp-Lighter" Swing and Sway with Sammy Kaye with Billy Williams "White Christmas" Bing Crosby with the Ken Darby Singers and John Scott Trotter and His Orchestra "The Old Lamp-Lighter" Swing and Sway with Sammy Kaye with Billy Williams "The Old Lamp-Lighter" [7] January 11 "(I Love You) For Sentimental Reasons" The King Cole Trio [8 ...
"The Old Lamp-Lighter" 1 "Sooner or Later (You're Gonna Be Comin' Around)" 8 "Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah" 11 1947 "The Egg and I" 16 "After Graduation Day" 22 "That's My Desire" 2 "The Red Silk Stockings and Green Perfume" 8 "The Echo Says 'No'" 17 "An Apple Blossom Wedding" 5 "The Little Old Mill (Went Round and Round)" 24 "Serenade of the Bells" 3
Billboard Most-Played Folk Records of 1946 is a year-end list compiled by The Billboard, printed in the January 4, 1947 issue.It includes rankings for the calendar year only, handicapping records at the beginning and end of the year such as "The Old Lamp-Lighter", which lost more than half of its points.
Some of the best rock, pop, jazz and country albums were released in 1971, including classics by David Bowie, Dolly Parton, Led Zeppelin, and Miles Davis. These albums all turn 50 years old in 2021.
It was on Lehrer's first album Songs by Tom Lehrer from 1953, and a new live recording on Tom Lehrer Revisited in 1960. The song is a parody of a popular tune well known at the time titled "The Old Lamp-Lighter" by Charles Tobias and Nat Simon, a hit first for Kay Kyser in 1947, and continued to have popular new recordings to 1960. The verses ...
As a boy, Robert Louis Stevenson was intrigued by the work of the old lamplighter who went about with a ladder and a torch, setting the street lights ablaze for the night. One evening in Edinburgh ...
Franklyn MacCormack (March 8, 1906 – June 12, 1971) was an American radio personality in Chicago, Illinois, from the 1930s into the 1970s. [1] After his death, Ward Quaal, the president of the last company for which MacCormack worked, described him as "a natural talent and one of the truly great performers of broadcasting's first 50 years."