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"High School Confidential" is a song by Canadian new wave band Rough Trade, from their 1980 album Avoid Freud. [1] The band's breakthrough Top 40 hit in Canada, it remains their most famous song. The song's producer was Gene Martynec, who won the Juno Award for Producer of the Year for his work on "High School Confidential" and Bruce Cockburn's ...
In April 2007, Byford released his autobiography, entitled Never Surrender after the Saxon song of the same name. Gigwise.com reported on 18 January 2010 [ 10 ] that Byford was launching a campaign to have Britons declare heavy metal as their religion in the United Kingdom Census 2011 , inspired by the Jedi census phenomenon (where 2001 Census ...
"Exchange" is a track by American artist Bryson Tiller, released on March 8, 2016, as the second single from his debut studio album, Trapsoul (2015). the hit song features a sample from the introduction of K.P. & Envyi's 1998 hit "Swing My Way". [1]
This page was last edited on 15 September 2024, at 17:04 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
RPM was a Canadian magazine that published the best-performing singles of Canada from 1964 to 2000. In 1986 , forty-one songs peaked at number one on the magazine's chart. Lionel Richie 's " Say You, Say Me " was the first chart-topper of the year while Bruce Hornsby and the Range stayed at number one into 1987 with " The Way It Is ".
As with most other Billboard charts, the Canada Country chart features a rule for when a song enters recurrent rotation. A song is declared recurrent if it has been on the chart longer than 30 weeks and is lower than number 20 in rank. [3] These are the Canadian number-one country singles of 2018, per the BDS Canada Country Airplay chart.
This page was last edited on 17 February 2022, at 12:15 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Canadian comedian and impressionist Rich Little recorded a version of the song, also in 1967, in which he performed the lyrics while impersonating then-Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson and former Prime Minister John Diefenbaker. Little's version was released in March 1967 on the Allied Records label (AR 6350), one month after the original single.