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Vinton's father suggested his son use his middle name of Robert professionally to clear up the confusion. [5] Vinton's birthplace of Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, is also the birthplace of Perry Como. [6] [7] Vinton's hometown named two streets, Bobby Vinton Boulevard and the shorter adjoining Bobby Vinton Drive, in his honor. These streets were ...
1974: Hurt: Best of Bobby Vinton (Holland) 1975: Best of Bobby Vinton, 2 (Holland) 1975: Bobby Vinton Sings the Golden Decade of Love (US #154) 1976: Best of Bobby Vinton; 1976: K-Tel Presents Bobby Vinton - 20 Greatest Hits; 1976: Bobby Vinton's Greatest Hits/Greatest Hits of Love; 1978: Bobby Vinton; 1978: Autumn Memories; 1979: Spring Sensations
Bobby Vinton's All-Time Greatest Hits is a two-LP collection of previously recorded songs by Bobby Vinton, released in 1972 by Epic Records. It reached #119 on the Billboard Hot 200 list of popular albums. It consists completely of singles by Vinton that were released by Epic.
100 Memories is the thirty-first studio album of Bobby Vinton, released in 1979 by the Canadian label Ahed.This album is a cover album of 100 songs from the 1950s to 1970s and contains two LPs.
"Coming Home Soldier" is a song co-written and sung by Bobby Vinton, which he released in 1966.The song is a sequel to Vinton's previous hit "Mr. Lonely," sung from the perspective of a man who is returning home to the girl he loves, after having fought in a war overseas, and has survived without serious injury ("no Purple Heart").
Completely devoted to songs that refer to the color blue, this album contained two singles: "Blue on Blue", which reached #3 on the U.S. Pop charts and "Blue Velvet", which went on to #1 for three weeks on the same chart. [1]
"L-O-N-E-L-Y" is a song written and sung by Bobby Vinton, which he released in 1965. [1] The song spent 8 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, peaking at No. 22, [2] while reaching No. 7 on Billboard ' s Pop-Standards Singles chart, [3] [4] and No. 1 on Canada's "RPM Play Sheet".
In 1968, Bobby Vinton revived "Halfway to Paradise" in a mellow, more romantic version. This recording went to No. 23 on the Hot 100, No. 8 on the Easy Listening chart, [11] and No. 17 in Canada. [12] The song was included on the million-selling album "I Love How You Love Me" in early 1969.