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Various - A Million Dollars Worth Of Doo-Wop, Vol. 6 flac album

Various - A Million Dollars Worth Of Doo-Wop, Vol. 6 flac album
  • Performer Various
  • Title A Million Dollars Worth Of Doo-Wop, Vol. 6
  • Date of release 1995
  • Style Doo Wop
  • Other formats MMF DXD XM DTS APE MP4 VOC
  • Genre Rock
  • Size MP3 1793 mb
  • Size FLAC 1635 mb
  • Rating: 4.5
  • Votes: 458

01 - The Teen Kings - That's A Teenage Love. 02 - The Universals - A Love Only You Can Give. 22 - The Uniques - A Million Miles Away. 23 - The Splendors - The Golden Years. 24 - The Kid & Group - Sleep Tight. 15 - The Bel Larks - A Million And One Dreams. 16 - The Empires - Sittin' On Top Of The World. 17 - The Dandevilles - There's A Reason.

Album titlle: A Million Dollars Worth Of Doo-Wop Vo. 0 (CD). Year of publication 2006. Customer evaluation for "A Million Dollars Worth Of Doo-Wop Vo. 0 (CD)". Evaluations will be activated after verification. 10 excellent 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 very poor. Please enter the digits and letters in the following text field. The fields marked with are required.

The Teen-Kings were not the group who backed Roy Orbison, instead they were a black vocal group on the rare Bee label in 1959 worth several thousand dollars. CD also includes another major rarity: Dearest Doryce - Rhythm Cadets on Vesta.

The sixth volume of Bear Family's doo wop history Street Corner Symphonies chronicles the year 1954 - a year when the style was starting to hit its stride just as R&B began to bubble up elsewhere. post-Platters doo wop lacked. In other words, the times were changing, and it's possible to hear that on this sixth volume, where the sweetness still outweighs the swinging, and where there are still plenty of neglected gems to be discovered among the standards.

Take Mixcloud on the go.

The progression, represented in Roman numeral analysis, is: I–vi–IV–V. For example, in C major: C–Am–F–G. As the name implies, it was common in the 1950s and early 1960s and is particularly associated with doo-wop. It has also been called the "Heart and Soul" chords, the "Stand by Me" changes, the doo-wop progression:204 and the "ice cream changes". The first song to use the sequence extensively might have been "Blue Moon", written in 1933 by Richard Rodgers, and first released, with lyrics by Lorenz Hart, in 1934. Tell Me Why: The Beatles: Album by Album, Song by Song, the Sixties and After. Cambridge, MA: Da Capo Press. p. 269. ISBN 0-306-81120-0.

Album · 2009 · 16 Songs. More ways to shop: Visit an Apple Store, call 1-800-MY-APPLE, or find a reseller. Choose your country or region.

Tracklist

1 The Infatuators I Found My Love
2 The Valiants Wedding Bells
3 The Remarkables Write Me
4 The Drippers* Such A Fool Was I
5 The Links She's The One
6 The Celbritys* We Made Romance
7 The Premiers Little Angel Face
8 The Calendars You Don't Fall In Love
9 The Ebb Tides* What Is You Name Dear
10 The El Reyes Mr. Moonglow
11 The Freeloaders* Nursery Love
12 The Murfreesboros* Oh My Love
13 The Pretenders Blue And Lonely
14 The Visions Go Where Ever Rainbows Go
15 The Cheerios Where Are You Tonight
16 The Del-Rios Alone On A Rainy Night
17 The Stylists Mourning
18 Gloria Ramsey & The Impressions My Love
19 The Themes* Cross My Heart
20 The Lyrics Got To Get Along
21 The Esquires* My Dearest My Darling
22 The Hollidays* Got My Letter
23 The Jupiters It Takes Two
24 The Boardwalkers* She Won't Go Steady
25 The Exciting Invictas I Don't Care
26 The Magic Tones* Tears In My Eyes
27 The El Vircos* First Kiss
28 The Everglades While Sitting In The Chapel
29 The Spears Why Did It End
30 The Inconquerables Wait For Me

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode: 0 95451 70202 3