Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Kokomo" is a song by the American rock band the Beach Boys from the 1988 film Cocktail and album Still Cruisin'. Written by John Phillips, Scott McKenzie, Mike Love, and Terry Melcher, the song was released as a single in July 1988 by Elektra Records and became a number one hit in the US and Australia.
The Beach Boys are an American rock band formed in Hawthorne, California, in 1961. ... Both "Wipeout!" and "Kokomo" were included on the band's next album, ...
Riding on the coattails of "Kokomo", Still Cruisin ' went gold in the US and Austria [10] and gave the Beach Boys their best chart showing since 1976. During Capitol's Beach Boys re-issue campaign in 2000 and 2001 however, Still Cruisin ' was left behind and allowed to go out of print, and it has remained out of print ever since.
The album features The Beach Boys' biggest hits from 1962-1966, but also includes the 1988 No. 1 hit "Kokomo". After the album was certified 2× platinum by the RIAA , Capitol made the decision to create sequels to the collection, so the original release was updated accordingly and reissued.
STREAM 'THE BEACH BOYS' ON DISNEY+ $9.99/Month “The Beach Boys” includes never-before-seen footage and new interviews with band members Brian Wilson, Mike Love, Al Jardine, David Marks and ...
"Kosovo" is a parody of the Beach Boys hit song "Kokomo". [1] It was produced in 1999 by Seattle radio comedian/radio personality Bob Rivers. The song gained notoriety in 2005 after a music video that Norwegian soldiers filmed while serving as peacekeepers in Kosovo was posted online.
Actor and musician John Stamos, left, of "Full House" fame, performs with Mike Love bof The Beach Boys. Stamos will join the band for its July 11 concert at Capital Credit Union Park in Ashwaubenon.
Stamos playing with the Beach Boys at Neal S. Blaisdell Center in Honolulu, Hawaii, January 2014. Stamos has occasionally performed in concert with the Beach Boys, dating back to 1985, typically playing drums and various other percussion instruments. In 1988, he appeared in their video for "Kokomo", in which he played conga drums and steel drums.