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It stayed in the charts for nine weeks, reaching its peak on the third week of March. The success of the single led Take One! to enter the Album Charts and peak at number 62. [7] The B-side "Apron Strings" is a cover of the song written by George David Weiss and Aaron Schroeder, first released by David Hess in 1959 under the name Billy the Kid. [8]
The song's title, repeated throughout the song, is "a general excl[amation] of pleasure or surprise". [3] It is used as counterpoint [clarification needed] to the lines it precedes in the lyrics, as in the following excerpt: "Hot diggity, dog ziggity, boom What you do to me, When you're holding me tight." At the end of the song, Como exclaimed ...
Hot Dog! is an album by the American musician Buck Owens, released in 1988. [3] It was Owens's first studio album since deciding in 1979 to quit the music business. [ 4 ] The first single was the title track , which Owens had originally recorded under the name Corky Jones. [ 5 ]
The song peaked at number 65 on the US Billboard Hot 100, giving the band their highest-charting single in the US, and remained on the chart for 17 weeks. Internationally, "Rollin'" topped the charts in Ireland and the United Kingdom and peaked within the top 10 of the charts in Austria, Finland, Germany, Norway, Portugal, and Sweden.
Five Easy Hot Dogs is the fifth studio album by Canadian musician Mac DeMarco. A departure from the previous studio albums in DeMarco's discography, the album is entirely instrumental and was recorded during a road trip from Los Angeles to New York. [1] [2] It was announced on January 4, 2023, and released on January 20. [3]
Feltman parlayed his hot dog cart’s success into the Ocean Pavilion restaurant, which became so popular that it was selling around 40,000 hot dogs a day by the 1920s.
"28" is a song by American country music singer Zach Bryan—released on July 4, 2024, as the fourth track from his fifth studio album The Great American Bar Scene. It was written and produced by Bryan himself, [ 1 ] [ 2 ] the song debuted and peaked at number fourteen on the US Billboard Hot 100 .
The song samples Richard "Dimples" Fields' "If It Ain't One Thing, It's Another" from his 1982 album Mr. Look So Good, and its title is a reference to a common eggcorn of the phrase "Dog-Eat-Dog World." The Dramatics featured on the song at Snoop Dogg's request after he contacted Dramatics leader L.J. Reynolds through their longtime bassist ...