Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
It's Polka Time is an American musical television series broadcast by ABC from July 13, 1956, to September 24, 1957. [ 1 ] Also known as simply Polka Time , the program featured authentic polka music, performed in Chicago , Illinois , [ 2 ] primarily by authentic Polish-Americans .
The Stranger is the fifth studio album by American singer-songwriter Billy Joel, released on September 29, 1977, by Columbia Records.It was the first of Joel's albums to be produced by Phil Ramone, with whom he would work for five subsequent albums.
"The Stranger" is a song by rock artist Billy Joel and the title track from his 1977 album of the same name. [3] The song was released as a single in Japan where it became very popular and peaked at #2 on the Oricon chart, selling more than 471,000 copies, charting as well in Australia, New Zealand and France. [ 4 ]
Big Time Rush ("Big Time Rush Theme) - Big Time Rush; The Big Valley – George Duning; The Bill Cosby Show ("Hikky Burr") – Quincy Jones and Bill Cosby; The Bill Dana Show ("Jose's Theme") – Earle Hagen; Billy ("You Could Be The Only One") – Ray Kennedy; Billy (1992) ("I've Told Every Little Star") – Sonny Rollins
Sheldon Leonard's The Andy Griffith Show may have broadcasted 4x as many seasons in the 1960s as David Levy's TV adaptation of The Addams Family cartoons, but the brooding-yet-bouncy theme song of ...
Song: "Stranger Things Theme" by Kyle Dixon and Michael Stein This dark and suspenseful score doubles as a tribute to the '80s, and to be honest, listening is a bit like watching an episode of ...
"Movin' Out (Anthony's Song)" is a song written and recorded by Billy Joel, featured on his 1977 album The Stranger as the opening track. The song critiques the ambitions of working- and lower-middle-class New Yorkers who strive for material success as evidence of social mobility, working long hours to afford the outward signs of having "made it". [4]
"Scenes from an Italian Restaurant" is a song from Billy Joel's 1977 album The Stranger. It has been described as "a characteristic Joel observation on New York life." [2] In 2021, Rolling Stone magazine ranked it the 324th [3] greatest song of all time. The song was also described as "a seven-minute epic" [4] by American Songwriter.