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Go to sleepy, little baby. when you wake, You shall have, all the pretty little horses. Blacks and Bays, dapples and grays, Coach and six a little horses. Hush-a-by, Don't you cry, Go to sleep, my little baby. [4]
"Hushabye" was covered by the Beach Boys on their 1964 album All Summer Long, featuring Brian Wilson and Mike Love on lead vocals. In 1993, two new versions of the song appeared on the Beach Boys' Good Vibrations box set, one live version and the other a split track with vocals in one channel and instruments in the other.
Hushabye is the sixth international studio album by Christchurch, New Zealand soprano Hayley Westenra. The album consists of lullabies and other gentle songs, and is intended to be a calming experience for both children and adults; Westenra sang closer to the microphone than normal in order to create an appropriate atmosphere.
Dilly Dally's first full-length album, Sore, was released on October 9, 2015, on Buzz Records in Canada and Partisan Records in the United States and United Kingdom. [5]Sore was a longlisted nominee for the 2016 Polaris Music Prize, [10] as well as a Juno Award nominee for Alternative Album of the Year at the Juno Awards of 2017. [11]
"Rock-a-bye Baby", a lullaby also called "Hush-a-bye" Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Hush-a-bye .
"'Lady Luck/Dilly Dally" is the fourth Japanese single from South Korean girl group After School. It is a double A-side single consisting of two a-sides and one b-side, the b-side being exclusive to the CD only edition. The single was scheduled to be released on June 13, 2012.
Most of the puppet characters, including Phineas T. Bluster, the cranky mayor and chief killjoy of Doodyville, Dilly Dally, a foolish carpenter who was usually the butt of Bluster's plots, Flub-a-dub, a beast with a duck's head, cat's whiskers, and the parts of several other animals, Heidi Doody, Howdy's sister, and Howdy himself, of course ...
"Hush-a-bye baby" in The Baby's Opera, A book of old Rhymes and The Music by the Earliest Masters, ca. 1877. The rhyme is generally sung to one of two tunes. The only one mentioned by the Opies in The Oxford Book of Nursery Rhymes (1951) is a variant of Henry Purcell's 1686 quickstep Lillibullero, [2] but others were once popular in North America.