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The video for "Downtown" was made to promote the first single from Impeach My Bush. In the video Peaches plays two characters, a woman in a red dress (probably a sex worker) and a man. Both of them interact in the video. In the end Peaches the man seems dead or passed out while androgynous Peaches cleans her face in front of a mirror.
"Downtown" also made Clark the first UK female artist to have a single certified as a Gold record for US sales of one million units. On Billboard's annual Disk Jockey poll, "Downtown" was voted the second best single release of 1965 and Petula Clark was voted third most popular female vocalist. [14] "Downtown" would be the first of fifteen ...
Downtown is an album by Petula Clark (her first album licensed to Warner Bros. Records) following the success of her single of the same title.The album's tracks were all produced, arranged and conducted by Tony Hatch and were recorded at the Pye Studios in Marble Arch with the session personnel including drummer Bobby Graham, guitarist Big Jim Sullivan and the Breakaways vocal group; the ...
Despite speculation that the lyrics contain innuendo, [8] [9] in an interview with American Songwriter magazine, the band's lead singer Chris Ballew explained that the song was inspired by two separate incidents: The first, which took place in Boston, involved Ballew taking LSD and going to the house of a woman he was attracted to.
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Rattus Norvegicus was ranked at No. 10 among the top albums of the year for 1977 by NME, with "Peaches" ranked at No. 18 among the year's top tracks. [25] NME later ranked it at No. 196 on its 2014 list of the 500 greatest albums of all time. [26] In 2000, Rattus Norvegicus was voted number 766 in Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums. [27]
What are Downtown Cellars' phone number and social media? 772-828-3408, Facebook Laurie K. Blandford is TCPalm's entertainment reporter dedicated to finding the best things to do on the Treasure ...
The lyrics to "Peaches" featured coarse sexual language and innuendo to a degree that was unusual for the time. The song's narrator is girl-watching on a crowded beach one hot summer day. It is never made clear if his lascivious thoughts (such as "there goes a girl and a half") are an interior monologue , comments to his companions, or come-on ...