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{{Short description|1966 song by Arthur Kent and Sylvia Dee}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2020}}
{{Infobox song
{{Infobox song
| name      = Bring Me Sunshine
| cover    = Bring Me Sunshine - Morecambe & Wise.jpg
| cover    = Bring Me Sunshine - Morecambe & Wise.jpg
| alt      =
| alt      =
Line 11: Line 8:
| writer    =
| writer    =
| composer  = Arthur Kent
| composer  = Arthur Kent
| lyricist  = [[w:Sylvia Dee|Sylvia Dee]]
| lyricist  = [[Sylvia Dee|Sylvia Dee]]
}}
}}


"'''Bring Me Sunshine'''" is a song written in 1966 by the composer [[w:Arthur Kent (songwriter)|Arthur Kent]], with lyrics by [[w:Sylvia Dee|Sylvia Dee]].<ref name="scott2008">Derek B. Scott, ''Sounds of the metropolis: the nineteenth-century popular music revolution in London, New York, Paris, and Vienna'', Publisher: Oxford University Press, 2008, {{ISBN|0-19-530946-4}}, {{ISBN|978-0-19-530946-1}}, 304 pages ([https://books.google.com/books?id=mV47XZvVOrAC&lpg=PA7&dq=%22Bring%20Me%20Sunshine%22%20%22Arthur%20Kent%22%20%22Sylvia%20Dee%22&pg=PA7#v=onepage&q=%22Bring%20Me%20Sunshine%22%20%22Arthur%20Kent%22%20%22Sylvia%20Dee%22&f=false page 7])</ref>  It was first recorded by [[w:The Mills Brothers|The Mills Brothers]] in 1968, on their album ''My Shy Violet''.<ref>[https://secondhandsongs.com/performance/397271/versions  "Bring Me Sunshine", ''SecondhandSongs.com'']. Retrieved 29 April 2019</ref>  In the UK, the song is associated with the popular comedy duo [[Morecambe and Wise|Morecambe & Wise]], after it was adopted as their signature tune in their second series for the [[w:BBC|BBC]] in 1969.<ref>Gary Morecambe, ''You’ll Miss Me When I’m Gone: The Life and Work of Eric Morecambe'', Publisher HarperCollins UK, 2009, {{ISBN|0-00-734367-1}}, {{ISBN|978-0-00-734367-6}}, 256 pages ([https://books.google.com/books?id=wERoYObxx-4C&lpg=PT105&dq=%22Bring%20Me%20Sunshine%22%20%20Morecambe%20%26%20Wise.&pg=PT115#v=onepage&q=%22Bring%20Me%20Sunshine%22&f=falsee page])</ref>
"'''Bring Me Sunshine'''" is a song written in 1966 by the composer [[Arthur Kent (songwriter)|Arthur Kent]], with lyrics by [[Sylvia Dee|Sylvia Dee]].<ref name="scott2008">Derek B. Scott, ''Sounds of the metropolis: the nineteenth-century popular music revolution in London, New York, Paris, and Vienna'', Publisher: Oxford University Press, 2008, {{ISBN|0-19-530946-4}}, {{ISBN|978-0-19-530946-1}}, 304 pages ([https://books.google.com/books?id=mV47XZvVOrAC&lpg=PA7&dq=%22Bring%20Me%20Sunshine%22%20%22Arthur%20Kent%22%20%22Sylvia%20Dee%22&pg=PA7#v=onepage&q=%22Bring%20Me%20Sunshine%22%20%22Arthur%20Kent%22%20%22Sylvia%20Dee%22&f=false page 7])</ref>  It was first recorded by [[The Mills Brothers]] in 1968, on their album ''My Shy Violet''.<ref>[https://secondhandsongs.com/performance/397271/versions  "Bring Me Sunshine", ''SecondhandSongs.com'']. Retrieved 29 April 2019</ref>  In the UK, the song is associated with the popular comedy duo [[Morecambe and Wise|Morecambe & Wise]], after it was adopted as their signature tune in their second series for the [[BBC]] in 1969.<ref>Gary Morecambe, ''You’ll Miss Me When I’m Gone: The Life and Work of Eric Morecambe'', Publisher HarperCollins UK, 2009, {{ISBN|0-00-734367-1}}, {{ISBN|978-0-00-734367-6}}, 256 pages ([https://books.google.com/books?id=wERoYObxx-4C&lpg=PT105&dq=%22Bring%20Me%20Sunshine%22%20%20Morecambe%20%26%20Wise.&pg=PT115#v=onepage&q=%22Bring%20Me%20Sunshine%22&f=falsee page])</ref>


==Musical influences==
==Musical influences==
Professor of Critical Musicology at the University of Leeds, Prof Derek B Scott,<ref>"[http://www.leeds.ac.uk/music/staff/ds/ Prof Derek B Scott]", Professor of Critical Musicology, Leeds University, home page.</ref> argues that the song is influenced by the Viennese popular style. He writes:
Professor of Critical Musicology at the University of Leeds, Prof Derek B Scott,<ref>"[http://www.leeds.ac.uk/music/staff/ds/ Prof Derek B Scott]", Professor of Critical Musicology, Leeds University, home page.</ref> argues that the song is influenced by the Viennese popular style. He writes:
{{quote|"The [[w:melody|melody]] implies a [[w:minor key|minor key]], with [[w:Harmony|harmonies]] on the [[w:Tonic (music)|tonic]] and [[w:subdominant|subdominant]]. This would, of course, be bizarre and inappropriate for the words "Bring me sunshine in Your Smile / Bring me laughter all the while". But we find that the tonality is actually the [[w:Relative key|relative major]] of the [[w:Key (music)|key]] implied by the tune, and the harmonies consist of the tonic (with a free-floating [[w:Major sixth|sixth]]) and [[w:Ninth chord|dominant ninth]]. Suddenly the words and music make perfect sense, the tension of the [[w:Consonance and dissonance|dissonances]] conveying the sense of an appeal for sunshine, rather than the actual presence of sunshine."<ref name="scott2008" />}}
{{quote|"The [[melody]] implies a [[minor key]], with [[Harmony|harmonies]] on the [[Tonic (music)|tonic]] and [[subdominant]]. This would, of course, be bizarre and inappropriate for the words "Bring me sunshine in Your Smile / Bring me laughter all the while". But we find that the tonality is actually the [[Relative key|relative major]] of the [[Key (music)|key]] implied by the tune, and the harmonies consist of the tonic (with a free-floating [[Major sixth|sixth]]) and [[Ninth chord|dominant ninth]]. Suddenly the words and music make perfect sense, the tension of the [[Consonance and dissonance|dissonances]] conveying the sense of an appeal for sunshine, rather than the actual presence of sunshine."<ref name="scott2008" />}}


==Morecambe & Wise version==
==Morecambe & Wise version==
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===Skip-dance===
===Skip-dance===
Although the second verse was often performed by an orchestra conducted by [[w:Peter Knight (composer)|Peter Knight]] over the duo's closing credits, they only ever sang the first verse, the second one being purely instrumental, with Eric and Ernie performing a "skip dance" to exit the stage. The dance has been attributed to BBC producer, [[w:John Ammonds|John Ammonds]],<ref>"[https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-21606463 Been and gone: The man behind Eric and Ernie, and the First Dog]", BBC News website, retrieved 2 March 2013</ref> and Eric's son Gary recalls that the inspiration for the skip-dance came from a [[w:Groucho Marx|Groucho Marx]] film sequence.<ref>Gary Morecambe, ''You’ll Miss Me When I’m Gone: The Life and Work of Eric Morecambe'', Publisher HarperCollins UK, 2009, {{ISBN|0-00-734367-1}}, {{ISBN|978-0-00-734367-6}}, 256 pages ([https://books.google.com/books?id=wERoYObxx-4C&lpg=PT105&dq=%22Bring%20Me%20Sunshine%22%20%20Morecambe%20%26%20Wise.&pg=PT105#v=onepage&q=%22Bring%20Me%20Sunshine%22&f=false page])</ref>
Although the second verse was often performed by an orchestra conducted by [[Peter Knight (composer)|Peter Knight]] over the duo's closing credits, they only ever sang the first verse, the second one being purely instrumental, with Eric and Ernie performing a "skip dance" to exit the stage. The dance has been attributed to BBC producer, [[John Ammonds|John Ammonds]],<ref>"[https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-21606463 Been and gone: The man behind Eric and Ernie, and the First Dog]", BBC News website, retrieved 2 March 2013</ref> and Eric's son Gary recalls that the inspiration for the skip-dance came from a [[Groucho Marx|Groucho Marx]] film sequence.<ref>Gary Morecambe, ''You’ll Miss Me When I’m Gone: The Life and Work of Eric Morecambe'', Publisher HarperCollins UK, 2009, {{ISBN|0-00-734367-1}}, {{ISBN|978-0-00-734367-6}}, 256 pages ([https://books.google.com/books?id=wERoYObxx-4C&lpg=PT105&dq=%22Bring%20Me%20Sunshine%22%20%20Morecambe%20%26%20Wise.&pg=PT105#v=onepage&q=%22Bring%20Me%20Sunshine%22&f=false page])</ref>


===Morecambe & Wise tributes===
===Morecambe & Wise tributes===
When [[Eric Morecambe]] died in 1984 so closely associated were the pair with the song that it was the title of the [[w:Bring Me Sunshine (1984)|Bring Me Sunshine]] tribute show at the [[w:London Palladium|London Palladium]] held in his memory. Ten years later, the BBC ran another 3-part tribute, also titled [[w:Bring Me Sunshine (TV series)|Bring Me Sunshine]].
When [[Eric Morecambe]] died in 1984 so closely associated were the pair with the song that it was the title of the [[Bring Me Sunshine (1984)|Bring Me Sunshine]] tribute show at the [[London Palladium|London Palladium]] held in his memory. Ten years later, the BBC ran another 3-part tribute, also titled [[Bring Me Sunshine (TV series)|Bring Me Sunshine]].


Lyrics to the song were also read at Morecambe's funeral by [[Ernie Wise]].<ref>Ernie Wise , Robert Sellers, James Hogg, ''Little Ern!'', Publisher Pan Macmillan, 2011, {{ISBN|0-283-07157-5}}, {{ISBN|978-0-283-07157-7}}, 352 pages ([https://books.google.com/books?id=YD_Gvc5aAGYC&lpg=PT223&dq=%22Bring%20Me%20Sunshine%22%20%20Morecambe%20%26%20Wise.&pg=PT223#v=onepage&q=Bring%20Me%20Sunshine&f=false page])</ref> Wise went on to declare it his favourite song during his appearance on the BBC radio programme, [[Desert Island Discs]] in Oct 1990.<ref>"[https://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/features/desert-island-discs/castaway/7dc10881#p0093zvy Ernie Wise]", Desert Island Discs, Sun 21 October 1990</ref> On the same programme three months later, the song was also a choice of jazz singer [[w:Adelaide Hall|Adelaide Hall]],<ref>"[https://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/features/desert-island-discs/castaway/24a1c73a#p0093zlq Adelaide Hall]", Desert Island Discs, Sun 13 January 1991</ref> and has since been the choice of several other guests including [[w:Dawn French|Dawn French]]<ref>"[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01pf6dx"], Desert Island Discs, Sun 23 Dec 2012</ref> and [[w:Rankin (photographer)|Rankin]].<ref>"[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01r09sy]", Desert Island Discs, Sun 3 March 2013</ref> It has also been used for the title of several books about the pair.
Lyrics to the song were also read at Morecambe's funeral by [[Ernie Wise]].<ref>Ernie Wise , Robert Sellers, James Hogg, ''Little Ern!'', Publisher Pan Macmillan, 2011, {{ISBN|0-283-07157-5}}, {{ISBN|978-0-283-07157-7}}, 352 pages ([https://books.google.com/books?id=YD_Gvc5aAGYC&lpg=PT223&dq=%22Bring%20Me%20Sunshine%22%20%20Morecambe%20%26%20Wise.&pg=PT223#v=onepage&q=Bring%20Me%20Sunshine&f=false page])</ref> Wise went on to declare it his favourite song during his appearance on the BBC radio programme, [[Desert Island Discs]] in Oct 1990.<ref>"[https://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/features/desert-island-discs/castaway/7dc10881#p0093zvy Ernie Wise]", Desert Island Discs, Sun 21 October 1990</ref> On the same programme three months later, the song was also a choice of jazz singer [[Adelaide Hall|Adelaide Hall]],<ref>"[https://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/features/desert-island-discs/castaway/24a1c73a#p0093zlq Adelaide Hall]", Desert Island Discs, Sun 13 January 1991</ref> and has since been the choice of several other guests including [[Dawn French|Dawn French]]<ref>"[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01pf6dx"], Desert Island Discs, Sun 23 Dec 2012</ref> and [[Rankin (photographer)|Rankin]].<ref>"[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01r09sy]", Desert Island Discs, Sun 3 March 2013</ref> It has also been used for the title of several books about the pair.


When [[Morecambe and Wise|Morecambe & Wise]] defected from the [[w:BBC|BBC]] to [[w:Thames Television|Thames Television]] in 1978, directly after their record-breaking Christmas Special the previous year, the signature tune was dropped. It was however used in later instalments of these shows.{{citation needed|date=February 2014}}
When [[Morecambe and Wise|Morecambe & Wise]] defected from the [[BBC|BBC]] to [[Thames Television|Thames Television]] in 1978, directly after their record-breaking Christmas Special the previous year, the signature tune was dropped. It was however used in later instalments of these shows.


===BBC promotional clip===
===BBC promotional clip===
In 2011, the BBC used the song in a promotional clip for the 75th anniversary of [[w:BBC One|its main channel]], beginning with the familiar opening shot of Morecambe & Wise before leading into a montage of other famous moments from the channel's history, most of which were edited so as to lip-sync with the song.<ref>"[https://www.bbc.co.uk/comedy/clips/p00gsk2m/comedy_clips_bring_me_sunshine/ Bring Me Sunshine] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110819073246/http://www.bbc.co.uk/comedy/clips/p00gsk2m/comedy_clips_bring_me_sunshine |date=19 August 2011 }}", BBC comedy clip, at the BBC website, retrieved 11 December 2011.</ref>
In 2011, the BBC used the song in a promotional clip for the 75th anniversary of [[BBC One|its main channel]], beginning with the familiar opening shot of Morecambe & Wise before leading into a montage of other famous moments from the channel's history, most of which were edited so as to lip-sync with the song.<ref>"[https://www.bbc.co.uk/comedy/clips/p00gsk2m/comedy_clips_bring_me_sunshine/ Bring Me Sunshine] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110819073246/http://www.bbc.co.uk/comedy/clips/p00gsk2m/comedy_clips_bring_me_sunshine |date=19 August 2011 }}", BBC comedy clip, at the BBC website, retrieved 11 December 2011.</ref>


===Morecambe FC===
===Morecambe FC===
Line 40: Line 37:


==Willie Nelson version==
==Willie Nelson version==
The 30 November 1968 edition of [[w:Billboard (magazine)|Billboard]] magazine predicted that Willie Nelson's version of "Bring Me Sunshine" (produced by [[w:Chet Atkins|Chet Atkins]] and [[w:Felton Jarvis]]), would reach the Top 20 in the [[w:Hot Country Songs|Country Single Charts]],<ref>''Billboard'', 30 November 1968, ([https://books.google.com/books?id=G0UEAAAAMBAJ&lpg=RA1-PA92&dq=%22Bring%20Me%20Sunshine%22%20kent&pg=RA1-PA92#v=onepage&q=%22Bring%20Me%20Sunshine%22%20kent&f=false page 92])</ref> eventually reaching #13 in 1969.  It was included in 1974 on the budget [[w:compilation album|compilation album]], ''[[w:Spotlight on Willie Nelson|Spotlight on Willie Nelson]]''. A different mix appears on Nelson's 2009 album ''[[w:Naked Willie|Naked Willie]]''; this version is featured in the closing credits of the 2010 film ''[[w:The Crazies (2010 film)|The Crazies]]''. In 2013, Willie Nelson's version was used as the theme to ITV sitcom ''[[The Job Lot]]''.
The 30 November 1968 edition of [[Billboard (magazine)|Billboard]] magazine predicted that Willie Nelson's version of "Bring Me Sunshine" (produced by [[Chet Atkins|Chet Atkins]] and [[Felton Jarvis]]), would reach the Top 20 in the [[Hot Country Songs|Country Single Charts]],<ref>''Billboard'', 30 November 1968, ([https://books.google.com/books?id=G0UEAAAAMBAJ&lpg=RA1-PA92&dq=%22Bring%20Me%20Sunshine%22%20kent&pg=RA1-PA92#v=onepage&q=%22Bring%20Me%20Sunshine%22%20kent&f=false page 92])</ref> eventually reaching #13 in 1969.  It was included in 1974 on the budget [[compilation album|compilation album]], ''[[Spotlight on Willie Nelson|Spotlight on Willie Nelson]]''. A different mix appears on Nelson's 2009 album ''[[Naked Willie|Naked Willie]]''; this version is featured in the closing credits of the 2010 film ''[[The Crazies (2010 film)|The Crazies]]''. In 2013, Willie Nelson's version was used as the theme to ITV sitcom ''[[The Job Lot]]''.


==Other recordings==
==Other recordings==
Line 57: Line 54:
*2012 [[The Jive Aces]] on their album ''King of the Swingers: A Salute to Louis Prima''<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.bluesinthenorthwest.com/index.php/2013/09/17/review-the-jive-aces-king-of-the-swingers-a-salute-to-louis-prima/ | title=The Cam Babes }}</ref>
*2012 [[The Jive Aces]] on their album ''King of the Swingers: A Salute to Louis Prima''<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.bluesinthenorthwest.com/index.php/2013/09/17/review-the-jive-aces-king-of-the-swingers-a-salute-to-louis-prima/ | title=The Cam Babes }}</ref>
*2014 [[Violetta (singer)|Violetta Zironi]] for the TV commercial of the popular Italian brand of cookies Pavesini.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.radiomusik.it/24148/la-canzone-della-pubblicita-dei-pavesini-video | title=La canzone della pubblicità dei Pavesini (Video) | date=18 June 2014 }}</ref>
*2014 [[Violetta (singer)|Violetta Zironi]] for the TV commercial of the popular Italian brand of cookies Pavesini.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.radiomusik.it/24148/la-canzone-della-pubblicita-dei-pavesini-video | title=La canzone della pubblicità dei Pavesini (Video) | date=18 June 2014 }}</ref>
*2017 [[Michael Ball (singer)|Michael Ball]] & [[Alfie Boe]] with the Rays of Sunshine Children's Choir & Friends to raise money for the Rays of Sunshine Children's Charity{{Citation needed|date=June 2021}}
*2017 [[Michael Ball (singer)|Michael Ball]] & [[Alfie Boe]] with the Rays of Sunshine Children's Choir & Friends to raise money for the Rays of Sunshine Children's Charity
*[[Ken Bruce]] and his then travel reporter [[Lynn Bowles]] recorded a version for charity.{{Citation needed|date=June 2021}}
*[[Ken Bruce]] and his then travel reporter [[Lynn Bowles]] recorded a version for charity.
*Local singer [[Ashleigh Wood]] recorded a version for her album My Journey as homage to the town of Morecambe.
*Local singer [[Ashleigh Wood]] recorded a version for her album My Journey as homage to the town of Morecambe.



Latest revision as of 20:43, 24 February 2023

"Bring Me Sunshine"
Bring Me Sunshine - Morecambe & Wise.jpg
"Bring Me Sunshine" BBC CD cover
Song
Written1966
Composer(s)Arthur Kent
Lyricist(s)Sylvia Dee

"Bring Me Sunshine" is a song written in 1966 by the composer Arthur Kent, with lyrics by Sylvia Dee.[1] It was first recorded by The Mills Brothers in 1968, on their album My Shy Violet.[2] In the UK, the song is associated with the popular comedy duo Morecambe & Wise, after it was adopted as their signature tune in their second series for the BBC in 1969.[3]

Musical influences

Professor of Critical Musicology at the University of Leeds, Prof Derek B Scott,[4] argues that the song is influenced by the Viennese popular style. He writes:

"The melody implies a minor key, with harmonies on the tonic and subdominant. This would, of course, be bizarre and inappropriate for the words "Bring me sunshine in Your Smile / Bring me laughter all the while". But we find that the tonality is actually the relative major of the key implied by the tune, and the harmonies consist of the tonic (with a free-floating sixth) and dominant ninth. Suddenly the words and music make perfect sense, the tension of the dissonances conveying the sense of an appeal for sunshine, rather than the actual presence of sunshine."[1]

Morecambe & Wise version

Morecambe & Wise in their classic "skip dance" pose, performed to "Bring Me Sunshine"

Skip-dance

Although the second verse was often performed by an orchestra conducted by Peter Knight over the duo's closing credits, they only ever sang the first verse, the second one being purely instrumental, with Eric and Ernie performing a "skip dance" to exit the stage. The dance has been attributed to BBC producer, John Ammonds,[5] and Eric's son Gary recalls that the inspiration for the skip-dance came from a Groucho Marx film sequence.[6]

Morecambe & Wise tributes

When Eric Morecambe died in 1984 so closely associated were the pair with the song that it was the title of the Bring Me Sunshine tribute show at the London Palladium held in his memory. Ten years later, the BBC ran another 3-part tribute, also titled Bring Me Sunshine.

Lyrics to the song were also read at Morecambe's funeral by Ernie Wise.[7] Wise went on to declare it his favourite song during his appearance on the BBC radio programme, Desert Island Discs in Oct 1990.[8] On the same programme three months later, the song was also a choice of jazz singer Adelaide Hall,[9] and has since been the choice of several other guests including Dawn French[10] and Rankin.[11] It has also been used for the title of several books about the pair.

When Morecambe & Wise defected from the BBC to Thames Television in 1978, directly after their record-breaking Christmas Special the previous year, the signature tune was dropped. It was however used in later instalments of these shows.

BBC promotional clip

In 2011, the BBC used the song in a promotional clip for the 75th anniversary of its main channel, beginning with the familiar opening shot of Morecambe & Wise before leading into a montage of other famous moments from the channel's history, most of which were edited so as to lip-sync with the song.[12]

Morecambe FC

Morecambe Football Club often plays the song both prior to and after their games, whilst the club's fans have adopted the song as the "official anthem".

Willie Nelson version

The 30 November 1968 edition of Billboard magazine predicted that Willie Nelson's version of "Bring Me Sunshine" (produced by Chet Atkins and Felton Jarvis), would reach the Top 20 in the Country Single Charts,[13] eventually reaching #13 in 1969. It was included in 1974 on the budget compilation album, Spotlight on Willie Nelson. A different mix appears on Nelson's 2009 album Naked Willie; this version is featured in the closing credits of the 2010 film The Crazies. In 2013, Willie Nelson's version was used as the theme to ITV sitcom The Job Lot.

Other recordings

The song has also been recorded by:

References

  1. ^ a b Derek B. Scott, Sounds of the metropolis: the nineteenth-century popular music revolution in London, New York, Paris, and Vienna, Publisher: Oxford University Press, 2008, ISBN 0-19-530946-4, ISBN 978-0-19-530946-1, 304 pages (page 7)
  2. ^ "Bring Me Sunshine", SecondhandSongs.com. Retrieved 29 April 2019
  3. ^ Gary Morecambe, You’ll Miss Me When I’m Gone: The Life and Work of Eric Morecambe, Publisher HarperCollins UK, 2009, ISBN 0-00-734367-1, ISBN 978-0-00-734367-6, 256 pages (page)
  4. ^ "Prof Derek B Scott", Professor of Critical Musicology, Leeds University, home page.
  5. ^ "Been and gone: The man behind Eric and Ernie, and the First Dog", BBC News website, retrieved 2 March 2013
  6. ^ Gary Morecambe, You’ll Miss Me When I’m Gone: The Life and Work of Eric Morecambe, Publisher HarperCollins UK, 2009, ISBN 0-00-734367-1, ISBN 978-0-00-734367-6, 256 pages (page)
  7. ^ Ernie Wise , Robert Sellers, James Hogg, Little Ern!, Publisher Pan Macmillan, 2011, ISBN 0-283-07157-5, ISBN 978-0-283-07157-7, 352 pages (page)
  8. ^ "Ernie Wise", Desert Island Discs, Sun 21 October 1990
  9. ^ "Adelaide Hall", Desert Island Discs, Sun 13 January 1991
  10. ^ "", Desert Island Discs, Sun 23 Dec 2012
  11. ^ "[1]", Desert Island Discs, Sun 3 March 2013
  12. ^ "Bring Me Sunshine Archived 19 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine", BBC comedy clip, at the BBC website, retrieved 11 December 2011.
  13. ^ Billboard, 30 November 1968, (page 92)
  14. ^ "Johnny One Time" album details at Brenda Lee website, retrieved 11 December 2011
  15. ^ "Johnny One Time - Brenda Lee" at AllMusic.com
  16. ^ "Jack Greene - Statue of a Fool" at AllMusic.com
  17. ^ "Yestergroovin' - Chet Aktins" at AllMusic.com
  18. ^ "Liz Damon's Orient Express" at AllMusic.com
  19. ^ "Spotlight on Willie Nelson" at AllMusic.com
  20. ^ "Mickey Gilley - Mickey at Gilleys" at AllMusic.com
  21. ^ "Sentimental Journey - Cliff Adams Singers[permanent dead link]" at AllMusic.com
  22. ^ "The Very Best of Mrs. Mills" at AllMusic.com
  23. ^ "Top Cat - Richard Shelton[permanent dead link]" at AllMusic.com
  24. ^ "Bring Me Sunshine", Foster & Allen, at aChart.us
  25. ^ "Bring Me Sunshine - Patrick Williams & His Big Band" at AllMusic.com
  26. ^ "The Cam Babes".
  27. ^ "La canzone della pubblicità dei Pavesini (Video)". 18 June 2014.

External links