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"Can't Buy Me Love" was released as a single, backed by John Lennon's song "You Can't Do That". The release took place on 16 March 1964 in the United States and four days later in the United Kingdom. In the US, "Can't Buy Me Love" topped the Billboard Hot 100 chart for five weeks.
Can't Buy Me Love" is a song by the Beatles. Can't Buy Me Love may also refer to: Can't Buy Me Love, a 2007 biography of the Beatles by Jonathan Gould; Can't Buy Me Love, a 1987 teen comedy starring Patrick Dempsey and Amanda Peterson "Can't Buy Me Love" , an episode of the television series Frasier
The album includes the song "A Hard Day's Night", with its distinctive opening chord, [4] and "Can't Buy Me Love", both transatlantic number-one singles for the band. Several songs feature George Harrison playing a Rickenbacker 12-string electric guitar, a sound that influenced the Byrds and other groups in the emerging folk rock and jangle pop ...
The title was later changed to Can't Buy Me Love after producers secured the rights to The Beatles' 1964 song of the same name, which featured on the soundtrack. [6] Released in August 1987, Love received mixed reviews but became the sleeper hit of the summer, [7] [13] with Peterson going on to achieve teen idol status as a result. [14]
Can't Buy Me Love is a 1987 American teen romantic comedy film directed by Steve Rash, [1] starring Patrick Dempsey and Amanda Peterson in a story about a nerd at a high school in Tucson, Arizona, who gives a cheerleader $1,000 to pretend to be his girlfriend for a month. The film takes its title from a Beatles song of the same title.
Hello, Dolly! is a 1964 (see 1964 in music) studio album by the American jazz singer Ella Fitzgerald. "Hello, Dolly!," "People," "Can't Buy Me Love," and "The Sweetest Sounds" were recorded in London, England, on April 7.
"Mama Can't Buy You Love" is a hit single for English musician Elton John from the EP The Thom Bell Sessions. The song was written by LeRoy Bell and Casey James (of Bell and James fame). Bowing at number 69 on the Hot 100 on 9 June 1979, the track became John's first US top ten hit in almost three years when it peaked at number 9 on 25 August ...
For this, a backlog of some 25 songs, issued by EMI in Britain and many other territories across the world from 1962 onwards, had yet to be issued by Capitol. The Beatles' Second Album was the first album of the group's work to be assembled by the company exclusively for the US market, Meet the Beatles! having been a reconfigured and shorter ...