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"What a Wonderful World" is a song written by Bob Thiele (as "George Douglas") and George David Weiss. It was first recorded by Louis Armstrong live in 1959. It was later recorded in studio and released in 1967 as a single.
File:Louis and the Angels (Louis Armstrong album - cover art).jpg File:Louis Armstrong & Duke Ellington The great reunion.jpg File:Louis Armstrong & Duke Ellington Together for the first time.jpg
Danny Kaye & Louis Armstrong 1959 Satchmo Plays King Oliver: Audio Fidelity ST-91058 Louis Armstrong 1960 I've Got the World on a String [10 tracks] 1960 Bing & Satchmo: MGM E3882P DRG: 2009 Bing Crosby & Louis Armstrong 1961 Recording Together for the First Time: Roulette SR52074 [10 tracks] Louis Armstrong & Duke Ellington: 1961 The Great Reunion
[4] In 1993, five years after the original recording, Bertosa played the acoustic version for producer Jon de Mello while the two were completing work on Facing Future, and de Mello decided to include it on the album as "Somewhere Over the Rainbow/What a Wonderful World".
“A Wonderful World: The Louis Armstrong Musical” opens with Armstrong standing center stage, blowing into his trumpet. Starring as Louis, Tony Award winner Iglehart is mesmerizing, becoming ...
The album was produced by Daniel Rey, who also did most of the guitar work. [5] Rey had previously produced three of the Ramones' albums, between 1987 and 1995. The album includes two covers: " What a Wonderful World ," originally performed by Louis Armstrong , and "1969," originally performed by the Stooges . [ 10 ] "
There’s an unlikely connection between Louis Armstrong and Beetlejuice — or at least there is for James Monroe Iglehart, the Tony-winning Broadway star of the new musical “A Wonderful World ...
Hammerstein later adapted the lyrics to be "A Kiss to Build a Dream On" [2] and it was recorded by Louis Armstrong in 1951. [ 1 ] It was also performed by Mickey Rooney with William Demarest , by Sally Forrest , and by Kay Brown (virtually the entire cast performed part or all of the song) in the 1951 film The Strip , and was a sort of ...