Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The group recorded the original version of "Daddy's Home" on February 1, 1961, and it was released on Hull Records in March 1961 with the B-side being "This I Know". The song is considered a sequel to the song "Thousand Miles Away", with the closing line in the coda being: "I'm Not a Thousand Miles Away".
Shep and the Limelites was an American doo-wop trio of the early 1960s, [1] composed of James "Shep" Sheppard (September 24, 1935 – January 24, 1970), Clarence Bassett (March 13, 1936 – January 25, 2005) and Charles Baskerville (July 6, 1936 – January 18, 1995).
"Love Has Finally Come at Last" is a song composed by Bobby Womack and recorded by Womack and singer Patti LaBelle, released on Womack's Poet II, in 1984, ...
There's no better way to say you love someone than by dedicating these love song lyrics to them! They're perfect for Valentine's Day, or any special occasion.
A little girl has captured hearts across the nation after she expressed her love for her adoptive parents in a viral video. In the clip, the child, whom outlets have identified as Gabby, says she ...
Dad has always been there, in the good times and bad, when you were little and today when you’re a full-grown woman. So, we've handpicked our favorite father daughter quotes to highlight your ...
The singles, "That's How Love Goes" and "Daddy's Home", peaked at No. 46 and No. 9 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart, respectively. The album was arranged by David Van DePitte, James Anthony Carmichael, David Blumberg, The Corporation, H.B. Barnum and Gene Page.
Daddy, Come Home is a song written by Irving Berlin and first published in 1913. The humorous song begins "Hello Central, dear Central, listen here: please connect me with my father" and tells the story from the point of view of a young boy calling his father on the telephone to ask him to leave work and deal with an assortment of family problems at home.