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Released by Swan Records as a B-side to "June, July and August," "Palisades Park" broke in when a Flint, Michigan, radio DJ played it by mistake. It peaked at #3 on the Billboard Hot 100 on 23–30 June 1962. [3] On the Hot R&B Sides chart, the song went to #15. [4] "Palisades Park" was the biggest hit of Cannon's career. [5]
Palisades Park (1962, Swan LP 507) Steps Out (1962, Swan LPS 511) Bang On (1963, Stateside Records SL 10013) - European release of Palisades Park The above five albums were issued in mono only; Freddie Cannon (1964, Warner Bros. W 1544 (Mono)/WS 1544 (Stereo)) Action (1965, Warner Bros. W 1612/WS 1612)
"Palisades Park" is a 2014 song released by Counting Crows on Capitol Records as the lead single from the album Somewhere Under Wonderland. Adam Duritz has said that the song is "about the best thing I've written in my life. It's an epic story of two kids from New York in the late '70s and their lives in Basin Park.
Shelley married Irving Rosenthal, the owner of New Jersey's Palisades Amusement Park, and in 1960 she wrote the music and lyrics to a radio and television jingle called "Come on Over", which proved to be a catchy and effective promotions device. The jingle was used until the park closed in 1971, rhyming "Palisades Amusement Park" with "swings ...
Pacific Palisades Fire — January 7, 2025 As of Tuesday, Jan. 14 evening, the Pacific Palisades Fire has burned more than 23,700 acres of land, and is currently just 18% contained, per Cal Fire .
The U.S. Justice Department has removed a database tracking misconduct by federal law enforcement, a list proposed by Republican President Donald Trump during his first term and formally created ...
Somewhere Under Wonderland is the seventh studio album by American rock band Counting Crows, released on September 2, 2014 [1] by Capitol Records.The album is the band's first album of original material in six years since 2008's Saturday Nights & Sunday Mornings and is their first release on Capitol.
Miles Teller's Pacific Palisades home burned down during the LA Fires. Teller explained that the fire was about 3 miles away from his home when they first spotted flames.