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Navajo Joe is a 1966 spaghetti Western film directed by Sergio Corbucci [3] and starring Burt Reynolds as the titular Navajo Indian who opposes a group of bandits responsible for killing his tribe. [ 4 ]
In 1964-1965, Roberts was part of a San Francisco-based folk trio called The Driftwood Singers (with Steve Lalor and Lyn Shepard). [ 4 ] [ 5 ] Signed by David Allen, manager of the hungry i , the group did several month-long stints at the i, opening for the likes of Bill Cosby , Carmen McRae , Godfrey Cambridge , and Joan Rivers .
This version of the song became a hit and debuted on both Billboard and Cash Box on May 21, 1966. It peaked at No. 31 on Billboard and No. 29 on the Canadian RPM Magazine charts, [4] while showing a humbler peak position of No. 43 on Cash Box. The song ran nine weeks on both national charts. Their debut album Hey Joe followed. [1]
The album includes the Cannonball Adderley song "Sack O' Woe" from the R&B-influenced school of early 1960s jazz. [4] Bruce Eder of AllMusic writes: The debut album by Manfred Mann holds up even better 40 years on than it did in 1964.
[1] [a] In total, the song contains 118 [2] [3] or 119 [4] [5] [b] references to historical people, places, events, and phenomena. [6] The idea for creating a song chronicling news events and personalities originally came to Joel from a conversation he had with Sean Lennon , wherein Lennon claimed that nothing of note happened in the news ...
These are the Billboard Hot 100 number one hits of 1965. That year, 14 acts hit number one for the first time: Petula Clark , The Righteous Brothers , Gary Lewis & the Playboys , The Temptations , Freddie and the Dreamers , Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenders , Herman's Hermits , The Four Tops , The Byrds , The Rolling Stones , Sonny & Cher ...
This is a list of Billboard magazine's Top Hot 100 songs of 1965. [1] The Top 100, as revealed in the year-end edition of Billboard dated December 25, 1965, is based on Hot 100 charts from the issue dates of January 2 through October 30, 1965.
Country Joe and the Fish were originally formed in 1965 by Country Joe McDonald and Barry Melton as an acoustic folk/jugband duo. This embryonic version of the group, supplemented by Carl Shrager, Bill Steele and Mike Beardslee, recorded an initial EP in September of that year which was released as a "talking issue" of Rag Baby magazine a month later.