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"Saturday Night Fish Fry" is a jump blues song written by Louis Jordan and Ellis Lawrence Walsh, [2] best known through the version recorded by Louis Jordan and His Tympany Five. [3] The recording is considered to be one of the "excellent and commercially successful" examples of the jump blues genre.
Jordan's raucous recordings were notable for using contemporary narratives. This is perhaps best exemplified on "Saturday Night Fish Fry", a two-part 1950 hit that was split across both sides of a 78-rpm record. It was one of the first popular songs to use the word "rocking" in the chorus and to feature a distorted electric guitar. [13]
Saturday Night Fry is a six-part comedy series on BBC Radio 4 that was broadcast between 30 April and 4 June 1988. The first episode had previously been broadcast as a pilot on 19 December 1987. [1] A different show of the same name aired on BBC Radio 4 in 1998, again hosted by Fry.
He could be the bartender mixing you a proper Wisconsin Old Fashioned during your Friday night fish fry at The Woods Golf Course on Green Bay’s east side or one of the acts playing the Key West ...
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The Friday night fish fry is a popular-year round tradition in Wisconsin among people of all religious backgrounds. Fish fries there are offered at many non-chain restaurants, taverns that serve food, VFW halls, some chain restaurants, and at Christian churches, especially those of the Roman Catholic, Lutheran, Anglican and Methodist traditions ...
Z-Cars – Fritz Spiegl and Bridget Fry, adapted from the traditional Liverpool folk song "Johnny Todd" Zig and Zag ("Zig and Zag") – Ricky Wilson and Simon Rix; Zoboomafoo ("Me and You and Zoboomafoo") – Kratt brothers; Zoey 101 ("Follow Me") – Jamie Lynn Spears; The Zoo Gang – Paul and Linda McCartney and performed by Paul McCartney ...
Friday Night Videos is an American music video/variety program that aired from July 29, 1983, to May 24, 2002, on NBC.Originally developed as an attempt by the network to capitalize on the emerging popularity of music videos, which had been brought into the mainstream by MTV during the early 1980s, [1] the program shifted over to a general music focus in 1990, mixing in live music performances ...