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"Coconut" is a novelty song written [3] and first recorded by American singer-songwriter Harry Nilsson, released as the third single from his 1971 album, Nilsson Schmilsson. It was on the U.S. Billboard charts for 14 weeks, reaching #8, [4] and was ranked by Billboard as the #66 song for 1972. It charted in a minor way in the UK, reaching #42 ...
The second single was "Coconut", a novelty calypso number featuring four characters (the narrator, the brother, the sister, and the doctor) all sung (at Perry's suggestion) in different voices by Nilsson. [19] The song is best remembered for its chorus lyric ("Put de lime in de coconut, and drink 'em both up").
Coconut (song) D. Daddy's Song; Drumming Is My Madness; E. Easy for Me; Everything He Needs; G. ... Ten Little Indians (Harry Nilsson song) This Could Be the Night ...
It should only contain pages that are Harry Nilsson songs or lists of Harry Nilsson songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Harry Nilsson songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Personal Best: The Harry Nilsson Anthology. Released: February 28, 1995; Label: RCA/BMG 07863-66354 — — Legendary Harry Nilsson. ... "Coconut" 8 5 42 90 — —
Initial estimates had The Man in the Iron Mask as the number one film. [13] 12: March 22, 1998: $17,165,239: Titanic became the first film since Star Wars to top the box office for fourteen consecutive weekends. It also became the first film since E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial to top the box office in its fourteenth weekend. [14] 13: March 29 ...
The album includes a cover of Harry Nilsson's "Coconut". None of the songs rose to success, including the album's title single "Move It Like This," but the album did chart at number 57 on the Billboard 200. [3] Two of the songs were used in feature films including "Move It Like This" (Big Fat Liar [4]) and "Best Years of Our Lives" (Shrek [4 ...
The soundtrack was released on December 1, 1998 under Atlantic Records, and features a mixture of classics from the 1960s and 1970s, particularly the work of Harry Nilsson with three songs, as well as new original recordings and covers. [2] The score to the film was written by the English composer George Fenton and was released separately. [3]