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Peacehaven & Telscombe F.C. Supporters covered it as Twenty Four Hours From Telscombe in 2016. Randy Barlow also covered the song with a country version in 1976-77. The comic radio drama Twenty Four Hours from Tulse Hill aired in 2018 on the BBC. The title is a pun on the close pronunciation of Tulsa with Tulse Hill ( a South London suburb). [14]
Blue Gene is American singer Gene Pitney's fifth album, released on the Musicor label in 1964. The album contained the Burt Bacharach and Hal David hit "Twenty Four Hours from Tulsa", a top 10 hit in the United Kingdom, Canada and Australia and a top 20 hit on the US Billboard Hot 100 (#17), as well as the minor hit "Yesterday's Hero" (#64).
Pitney's popularity in the UK market was ensured by the breakthrough success of "Twenty Four Hours from Tulsa", a Bacharach and David song, which peaked at #5 in Britain at the start of 1964. It was only Pitney's third single release in the UK to reach the singles chart, and the first to break into the Top Twenty there; it was also a hit in the ...
The song "Twenty Four Hours from Tulsa" is used three times during the first season, including the first song heard in the premiere (Gene Pitney's 1963 version) and the last song heard over the closing credits of the finale (Dusty Springfield's 1964 version). It captures the underlying situation of The Kid in the lyrics: "Dearest darling, I had ...
William Thomas Hader Jr. [1] (born June 7, 1978) [2] is an American actor, director, screenwriter, and comedian. He was a cast member on the NBC sketch comedy series Saturday Night Live from 2006 to 2013, for which he received four Primetime Emmy Award nominations and a Peabody Award.
Tulsa King was ranked tenth on The Wrap ' s "list of titles consumers are most excited about" for the week of September 22, 2024. [90] Within 35 days of the second-season premiere, 10 million households had seen Tulsa King, beating the 9.5 million that viewed season one within the same time period by 8%. By this time the series had eight times ...
24 Hours From Tulsa" — Gene Pitney; written by Burt Bacharach and Hal David, 1963 [1] A "Ada on My Mind," written and recorded by Jeremy Castle, 2010. [2]
"Twenty Four Hours From Tulsa" (Hal David, Burt Bacharach) – 3:00 (from Blue Gene) "Only Love Can Break a Heart" (David, Bacharach) – 2:49 (from Only Love Can Break a Heart) "Not Responsible" (Ben Raleigh, Barkan) – 2:31 (from Gene Pitney Sings Just for You) "Teardrop by Teardrop" (Bob Halley) – 2:19 (from Gene Pitney Sings Just for You)