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Hair (entire cast) Haircut One Hundred; Bill Haley & His Comets; Hall & Oates; Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds; Albert Hammond; Wayne Handy; Slim Harpo; Corey Hart; Ritchie Hart (aka Charlie Gearheart) Dan Hartman; Dale Hawkins; Isaac Hayes; The Edwin Hawkins Singers; Justin Hayward; Robert Hazard; Joey Heatherton; Heaven 17; Bobby Helms ...
American Bandstand played a important role in introducing Americans to such famous artists as Prince, Jackson 5, Sonny and Cher, Aerosmith, and John Lydon's PiL—all of whom made their American TV debuts on the show. [45] American Bandstand was a daily ritual for many teenagers throughout the nation. The Top 40 hits that everyone heard were ...
TV movie 1984 This Week's Music: Self/Host 1982 Late Night with David Letterman: Self – Performer Episode #1.44 1979–1980 American Bandstand: Self – Performer Episode #24.5 (1980) Episode #22.11(1979) 1979 Dinah! Self 1978 The Mike Douglas Show: Self – Performer Episode #18.64 1974 Don Kirshner's Rock Concert: Self – Performer Episode ...
Ant performed "Desperate but Not Serious" and "Goody Two Shoes" on the very first American Bandstand episode of 1983. [3] The song appears on the greatest hits collection, Antics in the Forbidden Zone, and both the studio version and a live version appear on the double Adam Ant compilation, Antmusic: The Very Best of Adam Ant.
In the U.S., DeSario is mainly known for her duet with KC, lead singer of the R&B and funk group KC and the Sunshine Band of the Barbara Mason cover, "Yes, I'm Ready" from 1980 (#2 on the Billboard Hot 100 and certified gold, Adult Contemporary #1 for 2 weeks) from her second album Moonlight Madness, released in 1979.
In 1954, the Elgarts left their permanent mark on music history in recording Albertine's "Bandstand Boogie," for the legendary television show originally hosted by Bob Horn, and two years later, by Dick Clark. In 1956, Clark took the show from its local broadcast in Philadelphia, to ABC-TV for national distribution as "American Bandstand."
The instrumental proved popular enough that the musical variety show American Bandstand used it as the song for its mid-broadcast break from the mid-1970s until the show completed its run in 1989. [3] The song can also be heard in a party scene in the 1979 film When a Stranger Calls. [citation needed]
Richard Wagstaff Clark [1] [2] (November 30, 1929 – April 18, 2012) was an American television and radio personality and television producer who hosted American Bandstand from 1956 to 1989.