Blurry

  • Length: 4:5
  • Rating: ( ratings)
  • Views: 49
  • Author: gutareman17

Tags: acoustic  blurr  Blurry  fools  friday  funny  guitar  halo  high  highland  josh  music  news  noise  plasma  shotgun  song  weathers 

semi-serious song in that i mean what im saying in it but its meant to have corny lyrics

lol

  • Length: 4:9
  • Rating: ( ratings)
  • Views: 20
  • Author: polenaaaa

Tags: dancing  fools  music 

fiona linda and polena dancing like idiots.

GangStar Music Part 2

  • Length: 3:27
  • Rating: 4.42 (12 ratings)
  • Views: 1207' favoriteCount='3
  • Author: gangstudios

Tags: bloopers  blunt  brown  GangStar  james  kim  madonna  minutes  Music  parody  Part  prank  tina  turner  wilde  wisemen  xxx 

First video from the "GangStar" series.Music:Fools Garden - Lemon TreePink & Christina Aguilera - Lady MarmeladeDJ Tiesto - Summer JamCrazy Frog - Last ChristmasHolly Dolly - Dolly SongHellogoodbye - Here ( In Your Arms )James Blunt - WisemenKim Wilde - Kid in AmericaTina Turner - What's Love got to do with itJames Brown - I Got YouHonky Mofo - Cuppycake DJ Optick & Activ - Feel GoodSubscribe & Enjoy :]

Brook Benton - The Boll Weevil Song

  • Length: 2:33
  • Rating: 4.90 (10 ratings)
  • Views: 2637' favoriteCount='22
  • Author: JBauder1948

Tags: pop  R&B 

Brook Benton was born Benjamin Franklin Peay on September 19, 1931 in Lugoff, South Carolina. When Peay was young he enjoyed gospel music and wrote songs. So in 1948 he went to New York to pursue his music career. He went in and out of gospel groups such as "The Langfordaires", "The Jerusalem Stars", and "The Golden Gate Quartet". When coming back to his home state he joined a R&B singing group, "The Sandmen", and went back to New York to get a big break with his group. The Sandmen had limited success, and their label, Okeh Records, decided to push Peay as a solo artist; however, they changed his name to Brook Benton, apparently at the suggestion of label executive Marv Halsman. Brook earned a good living writing songs and co-producing albums. He wrote songs for artists such as Nat King Cole, Clyde McPhatter, and Roy Hamilton. Soon he released his first minor hit, "A Million Miles From Nowhere". Later he went on to the Mercury label, which would eventually bring him larger success.Finally in 1959 he made his breakthrough with his hits "It's Just A Matter Of Time" and "Endlessly". "It's Just a Matter of Time" peaked at #3 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart, while "Endlessly" made it to #12. Both of the first two hits were written by Benton with Clyde Otis. They were originally offered to Nat King Cole, but when Otis became an A&R official at Mercury, he convinced Benton to sign with the label and record them himself, while asking Cole not to record the songs as planned. He followed this success with a series of hits, including "So Many Ways," "Hotel Happiness," and "The Boll Weevil Song". In 1960, he had two top 10 hit duets with Dinah Washington: "Baby (You've Got What It Takes)" and "A Rockin' Good Way (To Mess Around and Fall In Love)". In the mid- and late 1960's, Benton recorded for RCA Records and Reprise Records with minimal commercial success. In 1969 he signed with Cotillion Records, a subsidiary of Atlantic Records, where the next year he had his last major hit with "Rainy Night in Georgia." Benton eventually charted 49 singles on the Billboard Hot 100, with other songs charting on Billboard's rhythm and blues, easy listening, and Christmas music charts. The last album made by Benton was Fools Rush In, which was released posthumously in 2005. At one point he was recording on Groove Records.Brook died of complications from spinal meningitis in Queens, New York City, at the age of 56, on 9 April 1988.

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