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This led to Allen singing "Baby Mine" from Disney's Dumbo at a school concert. [21] Allen told Loveline that the audience was "brought to tears at the sight of a troubled young girl doing something good". At that point Allen said she knew that music was something she needed to do either as a lifelong vocation or to get it out of her system.
"Baby Mine" is a song from the 1941 Disney animated feature Dumbo. The music is by Frank Churchill, with lyrics by Ned Washington. Betty Noyes recorded the vocals for the original film version. In the film, Dumbo's mother, Mrs. Jumbo, an elephant locked in a circus wagon, cradles her baby Dumbo with her trunk while this lullaby is sung. It is ...
"Baby Mine", a popular song published in 1901 "Baby Mine" (song), a song from the 1941 Disney film Dumbo and also in the 2019 Tim Burton remake "Baby Mine", a version of traditional blues song "Crawdad Song" from the 1963 album Bill Henderson with the Oscar Peterson Trio
The song was first recorded as "Don't Tear My Clothes" in January 1935 by the State Street Boys, a group that included Big Bill Broonzy and Jazz Gillum. [2] The next few years saw several more versions, including "Don't Tear My Clothes" by Washboard Sam in June 1936, [3] "Baby Don't You Tear My Clothes" by the Harlem Hamfats in May 1937, [4] "Let Your Linen Hang Low" by Rosetta Howard with the ...
Record World said that Dylan's "rollicking piano and nasal vocal are dazzling." [13] Writer Jeff Perkins describes "Heart of Mine" as a highlight of Shot of Love. [14]Critic Sean Egan calls the song "sweet and vulnerable", [15] but considers the live version on Biograph "immediately superior", due to the "suffocatingly bad production" on Shot of Love. [16]
"Baby Be Mine" is a song by American R&B group Blackstreet. The song, which was recorded for the group's self-titled debut album (1994), was released as the debut single for the album and in promotion for the soundtrack to the 1993 film CB4 in February 1993.
The song was written by all four members of the band – George Harrison, Jeff Lynne, Bob Dylan and Tom Petty – and each of them sing a portion of the track. The song was released as the first single from the album, although it was only issued as a promotional single in the United States. [3] The lead guitar part is played by Gary Moore.
The Statlers' version was their first song to feature vocals by Jimmy Fortune, who had replaced Lew DeWitt, who had retired due to health problems. Also in 1983, Dutch singer/comedian Andre van Duin released it (with new lyrics) as "De Heidezangers"; in the accompanying video he portrayed a three-piece amateur-band of piano, guitar and bass.