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A comedy song, it reached No. 1 for one week in November 1975, [3] and was one of the few songs of its genre to reach this milestone. The song is a cover of Sheb Wooley 's [ 4 ] parody of the Tammy Wynette song " D-I-V-O-R-C-E ", [ 5 ] and Connolly's version to date has been his only No. 1 UK single, [ 3 ] though in the late 1970s he had a ...
Recorded in 1968, "D-I-V-O-R-C-E" is a woman's perspective on the impending collapse of her marriage. The song's title is an old parenting trick of spelling out words mothers and fathers hope their young children will not understand, they (the children) being not yet able to spell or comprehend the word's meaning.
It was the fourth studio album of Wynette's career. Epic distributed the album as a vinyl LP, with six songs on "side A" and five songs on "side B". [4] It was re-released as a compact disc by eOne and Koch Records in 1998. [7] It was then released digitally several years later. [8] The album received a positive review from Billboard magazine ...
Marvin Gaye was going through a personal crisis in the summer of 1976. In November 1975, Gaye's estranged first wife, Anna Gordy Gaye, sued Gaye for divorce, claiming irreconcilable differences, and sought child support for their adopted son, Marvin Gaye III. Gaye later argued his spending habits were causing him to fall behind on payments.
In “Penthouse (The Healed Version),” Ballerini sings, “I kissed someone new last night / And now I don’t care where you’re sleeping, baby.”
Extra-territorial Offences Act 1976 [Act 163] Law Reform (Marriage and Divorce) Act 1976 [Act 164] Law Reform (Eradication of Illicit Samsu) Act 1976 [Act 165] Legal Profession Act 1976 [Act 166] Plant Quarantine Act 1976 [Act 167] Antiquities Act 1976 [Act 168] ( Repealed by the National Heritage Act 2005 [Act 645] ) Real Property Gains Tax ...
Related: Maren Morris and Ryan Hurd’s Relationship Timeline Maren Morris and Ryan Hurd‘s love story had all the makings of a great country song before they called it quits. Morris and Hurd met ...
The song opens with the line: I've been working on a cocktail, called grounds for divorce. Uncut magazine said it was "surely one of the best opening lines of any pop song in years" [1] and NME compared it to something James Bond might say "this is kind of glorious one-liner he’d mutter before taking the bad guys down and then smooching a lofty Eastern European countess."