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The Booth Brothers is an American southern gospel vocal trio. It was originally formed in 1957 by four brothers but disbanded in 1963. It was reformed in 1990 by one of the original members, Ron Booth, with two of his sons, Michael and Ronnie Booth. [1]
As of June 2024, the original vocals, guitar and synth tracks for the song are considered lost; however, the Booth brothers would go on to record a remake of it, which was released on streaming and download platforms on 23 June 2024 on their album Ulterior Motives (The Lost Album) [8] [5] [9] as Who's Who?, a name the Booth brothers had ...
The song quickly became the trio's signature song. It was their first number one song and was named by the Singing News Magazine as one of the top Southern Gospel songs of all time. . A feature article about Mosley and his songwriting was featured in the April 2017 issue of Bluegrass Unlimited magazine and another in the February 2021 issue.
The song begins with a gradual fade-in of an orchestral string section and progresses to a drum-driven, majestic anthem. The lyrics "swallowing diamonds/A cutting throat" were derived from the final scene of Marathon Man where Laurence Olivier puts diamonds in his mouth. [1] Siouxsie's vocals are accentuated by expansive reverb effects.
Armstrong's popularity among African-American audiences dropped because of the song, but at the same time it helped the trumpeter to make his fan base broader. [6] In protest during the 1950s, African Americans burned their copies of the song, which forced Armstrong to re-evaluate and change the song's lyrics in a reissue. [7]
Spin highly recommended the album, praising its "stunning, almost seamless sample-driven tracks." [8] Robert Christgau of The Village Voice gave the album an honorable mention and quipped that it was "West Indian daisy age from boogie-down Toronto", choosing the tracks "Ludi" and "My Definition of a Boombastic Jazz Style" as highlights. [9]
"Jazz Music" by Gang Starr (this is a different song than the more famous "Jazz Thing") "Jazz Thing" by Gang Starr "Jazzfest" by Paul Soniat "Je T'Aime N'Orleans" by Big Boy Pete (aka as Peter Miller (musician)) "Jesus in New Orleans" by Over the Rhine "Jock-a-mo" by Sugar Boy Crawford "John Lennon In New Orleans" by Colin Linden
"Washington Square" was a hit single, reaching No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the week ending 23 November 1963, [4] kept from the summit of the Billboard Hot 100 by Dale and Grace's hit song "I'm Leaving It Up to You". [5] "