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The Grammy Award for Best Polka Album was an award presented at the Grammy Awards to recording artists for quality polka albums. Honors in several categories are presented at the ceremony annually by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences of the United States to "honor artistic achievement, technical proficiency and overall excellence in the recording industry, without regard to ...
1997: 36 All time Greatest hits (Timeless Music)3 CD set; 1998: Bobby Vinton Sings Blue Velvet: His Greatest Hits (Epic, Germany) 2000: Blue on Blue (with Andy Williams)2 CD set; 2001: Bobby Vinton (U.K. Curb Records) 2001: The Very Best of Bobby Vinton (TV music 2CD set) 2001: Mr. Lonely/Country Boy; 2001: Sealed With a Kiss/With Love
Walter Ostanek, Canada, three-time Grammy Award winner, Slovenian-Canadian; Polka Floyd; The Polka Maestre Band - Canada; Polkacide, San Francisco punk-polka band; POLKAHOLIX (Berlin Speed Polka) (Germany) The Mike Schneider Polka Band, Slovenian-style polka band from Milwaukee, WI [3] Six Fat Dutchmen; Walt Solek, the "Clown Prince of Polka"
Polka Album (1981) Bobby Vinton's Greatest Hits (1981) Polka Album is a collection of Polka songs recorded by Bobby Vinton, released in 1981.
Media outlets have often dubbed him the "King of Polka," with his recordings having won 18 out of the 24 Grammy Awards given for Best Polka Album. [1] Sturr's orchestra is on the Top Ten List of the All-Time Grammy Awards, and has acquired more Grammy nominations than anyone in the history of musical polka awards.
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.
Harold Loeffelmacher, circa 1957. The Six Fat Dutchmen was an American polka band, formed around 1932 by Harold Loeffelmacher in New Ulm, Minnesota, United States.The band was known mostly for playing the German-American (sometimes called "oom-pah") style of polka music that originated from Germany and the German-speaking areas of Czechoslovakia.
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