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"Music Box Dancer" is an instrumental piece by Canadian musician Frank Mills that was an international hit in the late 1970s. It features an arpeggiated piano theme in C-sharp major (enharmonic to D-flat major ) designed to resemble a music box , accompanied by other instruments playing a counterpoint melody as well as a wordless chorus.
"Music Box Dancer" was Mills' only US Top 40 pop hit. The follow-up, another piano instrumental, "Peter Piper", peaked at number 48 on the Billboard Hot 100 but became a Top 10 hit on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart. [7] Mills managed one final Adult Contemporary chart entry, "Happy Song", which peaked at number 41 at the beginning of ...
After singing for four years in the popular gospel-harmony group, Pickett, lured by the success of gospel singers who had moved to the lucrative secular music market, joined the Falcons in 1959. [4] By 1959, Pickett recorded the song "Let Me Be Your Boy" with the Primettes as background singers. The song is the B-side of his 1963 single "My ...
"Move Your Arms Like Henry" – Toot, Toot! "Mrs. Bingles Theme" – The Wiggles Movie Soundtrack "Mumbles the Monster" – Pumpkin Face "Murray Had a Turtle" – Pop Goes the Wiggles "Murray's Christmas Samba" – Yule Be Wiggling "Music Box Dancer" – Racing to the Rainbow "Music with Murray" – Whoo Hoo! Wiggly Gremlins!
"634-5789 (Soulsville, U.S.A.)" is a soul song written by Eddie Floyd and Steve Cropper. It was first recorded by Wilson Pickett on December 20, 1965 [1] and included on his 1966 Atlantic Records album The Exciting Wilson Pickett with backing vocals by Patti LaBelle and the Blue Belles.
during the promotion's "Rock and Wrestling" era. It starts out right then deliberately deteriorates in chaos. The music video which featured such artists as Cyndi Lauper (under a black wig and the identity of "Mona Flambé") and Meat Loaf first aired on MTV in 1986 and now appears on the WWE YouTube channel as a video archive.
Rough Dancer has more of whimsical feel, with the often perilous shifts in tempo and mood of the earlier record being handled in smoother fashion here." [ 14 ] Reviewing a reissue package, the Austin American-Statesman ' s Don McLeese opined that, "in a manner beyond form or category, this is some of the most sublimely mesmerizing music I've ...
Pocket Rockers was a brand of personal stereo produced by Fisher-Price in the late 1980s, aimed at elementary school-age children. [1] They played a proprietary variety of miniature cassette (appearing to be a smaller version of the 8-track tape) which was released only by Fisher-Price themselves.