Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"The 59th Street Bridge Song (Feelin' Groovy)" is a song by folk rock duo Simon & Garfunkel, written by Paul Simon and originally released on their 1966 album Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme. [4] Cash Box called it a "sparkling, spirited lid".
Feelin' Groovy is the debut album by the American sunshine pop band Harpers Bizarre, released in 1967. The record peaked at #108 on Billboard' s Top 200 Albums chart in May 1967. Over on the Hot 100 Singles chart, " The 59th Street Bridge Song (Feelin' Groovy) " peaked at #13 in February 1967 and " Come to the Sunshine " peaked at #37 the ...
Feelin' Groovy: The Best of Harpers Bizarre (Warner Archives, 1997) The Complete Singles Collection (1965–1970) ( Now Sounds , 2016) The Big Beat Records compilation albums Dance with Me: The Autumn Teen Sound (1994) and Someone to Love: The Birth of the San Francisco Sound (1996) contain the Tikis' two 45s and several previously unreleased ...
Simon & Garfunkel: The Complete Albums Collection is the fifth box set of Simon & Garfunkel recordings. This 12-CD Set contains all five of their studio albums from 1964 to 1970, as well as the soundtrack album from The Graduate from 1968, the 1972 Simon and Garfunkel's Greatest Hits compilation album, and four previously released live concert recordings (including the double album Old Friends ...
Live 1969 is the fourth live album by Simon & Garfunkel, released through Columbia Records.It consists of live recordings captured on the duo's final North American tour, prior to the release of their Bridge over Troubled Water album.
The album's liner notes by Judith Piepe, state of the song: "This is, of course, a take-off, a take-on, a private joke, but no joke is all that private or any less serious for being a joke." In 1966, together with Art Garfunkel, Simon re-recorded the song for the duo's album Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme , with several changes to the lyrics.
Credited on both albums as being performed by 'Simon & Garfunkel', "My Little Town" became the duo's eighth top-ten hit on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in late 1975, peaking at number nine. [8] It spent two weeks atop the Billboard adult contemporary chart , and was their second number one on this survey as a duo. [ 3 ]
The name of the album April came from Nino's birth-month. ... Feelin' Groovy; How Do You Feel? Feelin' Groovy; ... Singles Best 2002–2012 Memories: