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"Sixty Minute Man" is an R&B record released on Federal Records in 1951 by the Dominoes. [1] It was written by Billy Ward and Rose Marks and was one of the first R&B hit records to cross over to become a hit on the pop chart.
Zhongtang Temple in Tangshang Village, where Cao Huoxing wrote the song in 1943. During World War II when China was fighting the Japanese invasion, Chiang Kai-shek published a book titled China's Destiny [] on 10 March 1943, with a slogan that "Without the Kuomintang there would be no China."
"Can't Get This Stuff No More" is a song on American hard rock band Van Halen's 1996 compilation Best Of – Volume I. The song was one of two new songs recorded exclusively for the album (the other being " Me Wise Magic ").
Billy Ward (born Robert L. Williams, September 19, 1921, Savannah, Georgia, died February 16, 2002, Inglewood, California [2]) grew up in Philadelphia, the second of three sons of Charles Williams and Cora Bates Williams, and was a child musical prodigy, winning an award for a piano composition at the age of 14. [3]
"I Can't Do That Anymore" is a song written by Alan Jackson, and recorded by American country music artist Faith Hill. It was released in October 1996 as the fifth and final single from Hill's It Matters to Me album. The song peaked at number 8 on the Billboard Country charts in 1997.
As the opening track of the album, the song's lyrics were written by Park Jin-young and Shim Eun-ji. The song was also composed by Melanie Joy Fontana, Michel "Lindgren" Schulz, and A Wright. "I Can't Stop Me" is a synthwave and disco-infused pop song with '80s-influences and rich instrumental sound exuding a retro style. The track's lyrics ...
This reached No. 7 in the pop chart. [25] (1943) Tab Hunter on Dot. The B-side to "Ninety-Nine Ways", which was a No. 11 hit in March 1957. "Don't Get Around Much Anymore" itself charted at No. 74 in March 1957. The Ink Spots reached No. 1 on the R&B chart for two non-consecutive weeks and No. 2 on the pop chart [26] (1943)
"No More, No More", a song by Aerosmith from Toys in the Attic "No More, My Lord", a prison song collected by Alan Lomax in 1948, covered by Cowboy Junkies, Pentangle, and others Nothing More , an American rock band