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Sunny & the Sunglows (formed by songwriters Jimmie Lewing and Sunny Ozuna in Palacios, Texas) was an American musical group started 1959, and later known as Sunny & the Sunliners in 1963 after moving to San Antonio, Texas.
The Cheetah Girls 2 is the soundtrack album to the 2006 Disney Channel Original Movie of the same name. It was released on August 15, 2006, by Walt Disney Records. [1] The album was executive produced by Kenny Ortega, Debra Martin Chase, Raven-Symoné and Whitney Houston. [2] It features appearances from Drew Seeley and Belinda.
In the United States, the song was the highest-charting original single that the Beach Boys released between "Do It Again" (which peaked at number 20 in 1968) and "Getcha Back" (which peaked at number 26 in 1985); however, "Almost Summer" (a song written by Wilson, Love, and Al Jardine for the sidegroup Celebration) reached number 28 in 1978, while "The Beach Boys Medley" (which also ...
It's OK or It's Okay may refer to: . It's OK! (band), American band "It's OK!" (Atomic Kitten song) "It's O.K." (The Beach Boys song) "It's OK" (CeeLo Green song) "It's OK" (Delirious? song)
5. Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen (2004). Who’s in it? Lindsay Lohan, Alison Pill, Megan Fox, Adam Garcia, Glenne Headly. What's it about? Like Cady, Lohan’s character Lola is the newbie ...
"Girls, Girls, Girls" is the second single from rapper Jay-Z's album The Blueprint (2001). The single was released on October 2, 2001. It is a playful description of the artist's promiscuous lifestyle. The song contains a sample of "There's Nothing In This World That Can Stop Me From Loving You" by Tom Brock, who died a year later
This formula for success would prove disastrous for Presley's career. Elvis continued recording non-movie singles and was never "entrenched" in only "movie music". Popular music was on the threshold of complete renewal and change and Presley would become 'lost in Hollywood'. Yet he was the no.2 most charted act on Billboard's pop chart of the '60s.
"Talk to Me", or "Talk to Me, Talk to Me", is a song written by Joe Seneca. [4] It was originally recorded in 1958 by Little Willie John, whose version reached No. 5 on the R&B chart and No. 20 on the Hot 100.