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"Beautiful Sunday" is a song written by Daniel Boone and Rod McQueen (real name David Balfe) [3] and performed by Boone. It appeared on his 1972 album Beautiful Sunday and was produced by Larry Page and arranged by Boone. [4] It has been described as the biggest international hit in the British bubblegum pop genre. [5]
Daniel Boone (born Peter Charles Green; 31 July 1942 – 27 January 2023) was an English pop musician who became a one-hit wonder in the United States with the single "Beautiful Sunday" in 1972. [1] The song was written by Boone and Rod McQueen and sold over 2,000,000 copies worldwide. [2]
Beautiful Sunday; Directed by: Jin Kwang-gyo: Written by: Jin Kwang-gyo Kim Kwon-tae: Produced by: Seok Myeong-hong Choe Yun: Starring: Park Yong-woo Namkoong Min Min ...
Beautiful Sunday (song) Blue Is the Colour (song) I. I Belong (Kathy Kirby song) I Think of You (1963 song) This page was last edited on 8 November 2024, at 22:40 ...
It's a Beautiful Day is an American band formed in San Francisco, California, in 1967, featuring vocalist Pattie Santos along with violinist David LaFlamme and his wife, Linda LaFlamme, on keyboards. David LaFlamme, who as a youth had once performed as a soloist with the Utah Symphony Orchestra , had previously been in the group Orkustra ...
Prior to Good Sunday, Ultra Sunday Hurray! (초특급 일요일만세) began airing on March 18, 2001. Beginning on January 20, 2002 Show! Sunday World (쇼!일요천하) aired, and on July 14, 2002 Beautiful Sunday (뷰티풀 선데이) aired until March 28, 2004, where Good Sunday began to air its new, popular programming. As of July 11, 2010 ...
"Beautiful Faces" is a song by English singer, songwriter, and musician Declan McKenna. It was released as the lead single from his second studio album, Zeros , on 29 January 2020. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The song was written by Declan McKenna and Max Marlow .
What a Beautiful Sunday (Quel beau dimanche!), his novel of life in Buchenwald and after liberation was published by Grasset in 1980. It purports to tell what it was like to live one day, hour by hour, in the concentration camp, but like Semprún's other novels, the narrator recounts events that precede and follow that day.