Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
1998: The Best of Pat Boone (Music Club) 1999: Hymns We Love (Universal Special Products) 1999: Golden Treasury of Hymns (The Gold Label) 1999: My Greatest Songs (IMS) 2000: Love Letters in the Sand (Hallmark) 2000: At His Best: Love Letters in the Sand (Castle Music) 2000: I Believe In Music (Acrobat) 2000: The Very Best of Pat Boone (Big Eye ...
Patrick Charles Eugene Boone [1] (born June 1, 1934) is an American singer, composer, actor, author, television personality, radio host and philanthropist. During his recording career, he sold nearly 50 million records and had 38 Top 40 hits; he also appeared in various Hollywood films.
It should only contain pages that are Pat Boone songs or lists of Pat Boone songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Pat Boone songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
"No Arms Can Ever Hold You" (also known as "No Other Arms") is a song popularized in 1955 by Pat Boone [1] and Georgie Shaw, [2] who both charted in the United States with their renditions. The Bachelors recording
The best-known version is by Pat Boone, who had a number one hit with it on the Billboard Best Sellers in Stores chart for one week beginning June 10, 1957. This was mainly due to it being the flip side of Pat Boone's hit recording "Love Letters in the Sand". It also reached No. 14 in the Jockeys chart and No. 23 in the Top 100. [1]
In 1958, the song was recorded under the title "A Wonderful Time Up There" by Pat Boone featuring Billy Vaughn and His Orchestra and Chorus. It reached #2 in the U.K. and #4 in the U.S., [1] and was featured on the 1959 album, Pat Boone Sings. [2] The recording was produced by Randy Wood. [3] and ranked #24 on Billboard magazine's Top 50 songs ...
(Top) 1 Track listing. 2 Certifications. 3 References. ... Pat's Great Hits is the first greatest-hits album by Pat Boone. [2] It was released in 1957 on Dot Records ...
Bob Dylan said of Boone's cover, "Of all the people who sang 'Tutti Frutti,' Pat Boone was probably the only one who knew what he was singing about." [30] Little Richard admitted that though Boone "took [his] music", Boone made it more popular due to his high status in the white music industry. [37]