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"May the Bird of Paradise Fly up Your Nose" is a 1965 novelty song performed by Little Jimmy Dickens. It was Dickens' most successful single on the U.S. country music chart. It spent two weeks at No. 1 that November, and stayed on the chart for a total of 18 weeks. [1] On the overall Billboard Hot 100 the song peaked at No. 15. It was his only ...
"Bluebird of Happiness" is a song composed in 1934 by Sandor Harmati, with words by Edward Heyman and additional lyrics by Harry Parr-Davies. Harmati wrote the song for his friend, the tenor Jan Peerce , the leading singer at Radio City Music Hall .
The Velvet Underground song “Candy Says” contains a line pertaining to watching the blue birds fly as a metaphor for happiness passing by Candy Darling, the song’s subject, while she is in the wrong body. [7] The Allman Brothers Band's 1972 song "Blue Sky" has the lyric "Don't fly, mister blue bird, I'm just walking down the road".
White Flames is the first solo album by British blues guitarist Snowy White, released in 1983.It includes the song "Bird of Paradise", which reached No. 6 on the UK charts when it was released as a single.
The song was the only single released from the album, and is White's signature song. The song has featured on various compilations of White's material, such as Goldtop: Groups & Sessions '74–'94, Pure Gold and The Best of Snowy White. White performed the song on the BBC Television show Top of the Pops in 1984.
A 1916 advertisement for the famous play "Bird of Paradise." The Broadway show popularized Hawaiian music to Americans in 1912. "The Bird of Paradise" was so popular that it became a film in 1932 and again in 1951, though Kekuku was not in either film. [5] At the age of 53, Kekuku settled in Chicago and ran a popular and successful music school ...
Sarah Jessica Parker Janet Mayer / SplashNews.com Sotheby’s Fashion Icons Sale is auctioning Carrie Bradshaw’s iconic blue bird headpiece. The taxidermied Bird of Paradise accessory features a ...
The Blue Bird is a partsong (Op. 119 No. 3) composed by Charles Villiers Stanford in 1910. It is set to the words of L'Oiseau Bleu, a poem by Mary Elizabeth Coleridge, which depicts a blue bird in flight over a lake. It is written for SAATB choir: soprano, divided altos, tenor and bass.