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The Vogues' Greatest Hits is an LP album by The Vogues, released by Reprise Records (RS 6371) in 1970, consisting of the group's charted hits from the Co & Ce and Reprise labels. For this collection, arranger Ernie Freeman wrote orchestral parts to overdub the original Co & Ce masters of "You're the One", "Five O'Clock World", and "Magic Town ...
The Vogues were once again a part of the Happy Together Tour in 2023, with Shawn Stevens filling in again for Bo Wagner. The Vogues will again be a part of the Happy Together tour in 2024, with the line up of Elich, Taylor and Sean Moran (another former member of Blasko's Pittsburgh group) filling for McCoy.
"Five O'Clock World" (also known as "5 O'Clock World") is a song written by Allen Reynolds and recorded by American vocal group The Vogues. It reached number 1 on WLS on 17 December 1965 and 7 January 1966, number 1 in Canada on the RPM singles chart on 10 January 1966 (their first of two chart-toppers there that year, followed by "Magic Town" in April), and number 4 in the U.S. on the Hot 100 ...
It should only contain pages that are The Vogues songs or lists of The Vogues songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about The Vogues songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Meet the Vogues (1965) Five O'Clock World (1966) Turn Around, Look at Me (1968) Five O'Clock World is the second album by the Vogues, released by Co & Ce Records in 1966.
Turn Around, Look at Me is the third studio album by The Vogues. It was their debut album for Reprise Records in 1968, after their previous label, the Pittsburgh based Co & Ce Records, folded. The album was reissued, combined with the 1969 Vogues album Till, in compact disc format, by Taragon Records on November 6, 2001. The re-issue producer ...
In the United Kingdom, a version recorded by Malcolm Vaughan spent 14 weeks on the charts, peaking at number three in 1957. [10]The song was revived in 1968 by the Vogues, with their version reaching number seven on the Hot 100 chart [11] and faring even better on the Easy Listening chart, where it spent two weeks at number one in October 1968.
The Vogues remade "Since I Don't Have You" for their 1968 album release Memories: the track would also being included on the 1970 album release The Vogues Sing the Good Old Songs and Other Hits from which it was issued as a fourth single in December 1970 to reach #8 on the Billboard Easy Listening hit ranking, marking the Vogues last Top Ten ...