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The song is about a man whose strange hobby is stealing women's lingerie from washing lines. [6] According to Roger Waters, "Arnold Layne" was actually based on a real person: "Both my mother and Syd's mother had students as lodgers because there was a girls' college up the road so there were constantly great lines of bras and knickers on our washing lines and 'Arnold' or whoever he was, had ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; ... Sounds of Love may refer to: Sounds of Love (album), a 1970 album by Bobby ...
When the collection Relics was released in 1971, critic Dave Marsh wrote in Creem that he had expected "Candy and a Currant Bun" to be on it. (It was not.) His album review was largely composed of a paean to this missing track, writing in part that "It's simply the definitive 1967 British rock'n'roll single.
The version was arranged by Gene Barge and produced by Barge and Ralph Bass, and James' version was released as the B-side of "When I Stop Dreaming" on Cadet Records. [3] The Sandpipers recorded this song on their Come Saturday Morning album also in 1970 on A&M Records. [4]
Arnold, dressed up as his undefeatable character, posed still with the museum visitors, waiting for the perfect moment to surprise them while they were taking pictures of the fake "statue".
Jazmine Sullivan penned the songs "Anything (To Find You)", "Everything to Me" and "Until It's Gone". [4] Producer Rico Love co-wrote and produced several songs on New Life. [4] DMX co-wrote "Don't Gotta Go Home", which also appeared on his album Grand Champ. [5] Songwriter Diane Warren wrote "For You I Will" for the Space Jam soundtrack. [6]
The song's lyrics contains the titles of Arnold's best-known songs to that time, intertwined to affirm a man's dedication to his significant other. Included in the song's lyrics are the names of 10 of the 17 number one hits he had achieved on the Billboard country charts through late 1952, when Arnold recorded and released the song.
ABBA Christmas — This infomercial spoof promotes a never-released album of holiday songs from "The Fleetwood Mac of cold weather" (Bowen Yang, episode host Kate McKinnon, and McKinnon's fellow SNL alums Maya Rudolph and Kristen Wiig), all set to the tunes of their well-known classics (e.g. "Gifts for Me, Gifts for You"). [7]