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"Make Your Own Kind of Music" is a song by American singer Cass Elliot released in September 1969 by Dunhill Records. The song was written by Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil, while production was helmed by Steve Barri. In the United States, "Make Your Own Kind of Music" was a Top 40 hit, in which it peaked at number 36 on the Billboard Hot 100.
The act included Elliot and two male singers who served as backup singers and sidekicks during the musical numbers. The title of the show was Don't Call Me Mama Anymore, named after one of the songs written by Elliot's friend Earle Brown. The song was born out of Elliot's frustration with being identified as "Mama Cass".
The song became a hit in the U.S. on both the Billboard Hot 100 (#58) and Country (#39) charts. [1] On Cash Box it reached #45. [2] The song was a bigger hit in Canada, where it peaked at number 26 on the Pop singles chart. [3]
What would you choose as your swan song? For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Mama Do (Uh Oh, Uh Oh) Mama from the Train; Mama Said (The Shirelles song) Mama Take Me Home; Mama Tried (song) Mama, Take Me Home (Rednex song) Mama's Broken Heart; Mama's Song; Mamma (song) La mamma (song) The Man That Turned My Mama On; Meanwhile Back at Mama's; Mom (Bonnie Tyler song) More Than a Name on a Wall; Mother (Danzig song) Mother ...
Cass Elliot is the subject of Jon Johnson's Make Your Own Kind of Music: A Career Retrospective of Cass Elliot (1987) [122] and Eddi Fiegel's Dream a Little Dream of Me: The Life of Mama Cass Elliot (2005). [123] Chris Campion authored Wolfking, a biography of John Phillips that was authorized by the John Phillips Estate. [124] [125] [126]
"Mama" is a song by the British girl group the Spice Girls. It was written by the Spice Girls, Matt Rowe and Richard Stannard , and produced by Rowe and Stannard for the group's debut album Spice , released in November 1996.
"A Song for Mama" is a number-one R&B single by the American R&B group Boyz II Men. The tune, which was written and produced by Babyface , served as the theme song to the 1997 motion picture Soul Food , and spent two weeks at number one on the US R&B chart.