I Have to Be Good So I Can See My Baby Again

1961 song past Wayne Cochran

"Last Kiss"
Single by Wayne Cochran
B-side "Funny Feeling"
Released 1961
Recorded
  • July 1961 (original version)
  • 1963 (Macon, Georgia) (re-recorded version)
Studio UGA Campus (Athens, Georgia) (original version)
Genre R&B
Label
  • Gala (original version – 1961)
  • King (re-recorded version – 1963)
Songwriter(s)
  • Wayne Cochran
  • Joe Carpenter[1]
  • Randall Hoyal
  • Bobby McGlon

"Concluding Kiss" is a song released by Wayne Cochran in 1961 on the Gala label. It failed to practise well on the charts.[2] Cochran subsequently re-recorded his song for the King label in 1963. Information technology was revived past J. Frank Wilson and the Cavaliers, Pearl Jam and several international artists, including the Canadian group Wed, with varying degrees of success. The vocal was one of several teen tragedy songs from that period. The song's opening lyrics mirror the opening lyrics of Septimus Winner's "Der Deitcher's Dog".

Background [edit]

The song was supposedly based on the truthful story of Jeanette Clark and J.L. Hancock, who were both 16 years old when their car hit a tractor-trailer on a route in rural Barnesville, Georgia. The trouble is that the song was recorded more a year before the blow supposedly happened. Clark and Hancock were on a engagement a few days before Christmas in 1962. A local gas station attendant helping with the recovery of the bodies did not recognize his own daughter. Hancock and Clark'due south friend Wayne Cooper, who was riding with them, was killed instantly. Their 2 other friends, Precious stone Emerson and Ed Shockley, survived with serious injuries. Wayne Cochran'south drummer had been dating Jeannette Clark's sister at the time of the wreck. The vocal was written by Wayne Cochran, who lived on Route 1941 in Georgia, about xv miles from the crash site. It was a busy road, and Cochran witnessed many accidents on information technology. He was working on a song based on all the crashes he saw, and was about halfway done with "Last Kiss" when he heard almost the wreck in Barnesville. There was an intense emotional response from the community afterwards the tragedy, and Cochran used those feelings to cease the song, which he dedicated to Jeanette Clark.

Lyrical content [edit]

The narrator borrows his father's car to have his girlfriend out on a date, and comes upon a stalled car in the road. Unable to terminate, the narrator swerves to the right to avoid it, losing command and crashing violently in the process, knocking him and his girlfriend unconscious. The narrator subsequently regains consciousness in the midst of a rainstorm, and finds several people at the scene of the accident. While partially blinded by the claret flowing from his injuries, the narrator is able to find his girlfriend, nevertheless lying unconscious. When he cradles his girlfriend lovingly in his artillery, she regains partial consciousness, smiling and asking the narrator to "hold me, darling, for a niggling while." The narrator and then gives her the titular "last kiss" as she fades into decease and enters the afterlife.

In the song's chorus, the narrator vows to be a good person so that he may reunite with his honey when his time comes, believing she has made it into Heaven.

Original version [edit]

By Wayne Cochran, Joe Carpenter, Randall Hoyal & Bobby McGlon (1961)

In the summer of 1961, four friends traveled to the University of Georgia in Athens, Georgia, to record a vocal Wayne Cochran had written, with Joe Carpenter, Randall Hoyal and Bobby McGlon, chosen "Last Kiss". Wayne Cochran (vocals), Joe Carpenter (guitar), Bobby Rakestraw (bass), and Jerry Reppert (drums) recorded the song for the Gala label, a small label based in Vidalia. When the labels for the 45s, Gala #117, were printed, the names of co-writers Joe Carpenter, Randall Hoyal and Bobby McGlon were left off.[ citation needed ] Cochran evidently never asked Gala to modify the label, to include the other names; to this day Cochran is the merely i credited with writing "Final Kiss".

Cochran would keep to re-record the song for release on Aire Records (1962),[3] in a slightly different tempo, with some changes to the lyrics and for re-release on King Records in 1963. In all, Cochran recorded four versions of the song, the original, Gala #117, Boblo Records #101, King Records #5856, and Aire Records #150, released every bit "Last Buss" b/w "Border of the Sea", with Cochran sharing vocals with an unnamed male person singer. The Aire disc was hands the most different version of all, with heavy reverb and a staccato drumbeat. Aire Records, located in Dublin, Georgia, credited the song to Perry Music, as did the Gala recording. The Boblo disc credited "Final Kiss" to Macon Music, while the Male monarch record cited Boblo-BMI. The Boblo record featured "Last Kiss Ii" b/w "Hey! Baby" (Boblo 101-A), produced by Bobby Smith, offering some other have on the song, with different lyrics, a faster tempo, and dissimilar instrumentation. A fifth version of the song was cobbled from the Boblo recording, rechanneled for stereo, on Radical Musik Records, probably effectually 1973.

The original opens with the sound of a screeching crash, then the drums showtime, and the bass picks upward the trounce; in dissimilarity, the final version sounds like a cross between a pop organisation and a reggae recording. Cochran loaded 45s in the body of his car, taking them forth to gigs, to sell to fans, although it didn't assist much. Over the course of the 4 versions, Cochran expanded his (and his co-writers') concept of the song, seeking a wider audition. Cochran would later go on to Miami, where he establish moderate success playing nightclubs, with his band, CC Ryders. Jackie Gleason had Cochran on his television testify several times. Cochran went into the ministry building, in later years; he doesn't talk well-nigh his rock and roll years anymore.

On September 18, 1961, Billboard Music Week printed a review of the song "Last Kiss"[4] and gave information technology three stars but said cypher virtually the song itself in the review. None of the records charted, failing even to reach the "Bubbling Nether" level, although the record was a local hit in Georgia, earlier it disappeared.

Billboard had kind words for the B-Side, in its review of "Last Kiss" — giving four stars to the song called "Funny Feeling", on the flip side, written by Joe Carpenter and Milt "Pete" Skelton. The reviewer said, "Blues, chanted in relaxed style, with a funky guitar backing. Derivative only a good job."[4] "Funny Feeling" didn't make an impression on disc jockeys, either.

J. Frank Wilson and the Cavaliers version [edit]

"Concluding Kiss"
Last Kiss Wilson.jpg

Danish vinyl single

Single by J. Frank Wilson and the Cavaliers
from the anthology Last Kiss
B-side "That'south How Much I Dearest You"
Released June 1964
Recorded 1964
Studio Accurate Sound Co. (San Angelo, Texas)
Length 2:25
Label Josie
Songwriter(south)
  • Wayne Cochran
  • Joe Carpenter[1]
  • Randall Hoyal
  • Bobby McGlon
Producer(s)
  • Sonley Roush
  • Ron Newdoll

"Last Osculation" came to the attention of record promoter Sonley Roush, a Texas promoter eking out a living, looking for the next big affair. Roush brought the song to a group that he booked around West Texas, the Cavaliers of San Angelo, with the proviso that singer J. Frank Wilson was still with the band. Wilson joined the Cavaliers subsequently his discharge from Goodfellow Air Strength Base (San Angelo, Texas) in 1962, only had left for a while, unsure of the futurity. Credit should be given too to Sid Holmes of San Angelo for founding the original Cavaliers band in c.1956. He afterwards discovered J. Frank Wilson in the early 1960s and invited him to join the band and did sign him. Holmes, a fine rockabilly guitarist, also taught futurity Cavalier Lewis Elliott to play bass guitar, and too brought Jim Wynne into the band to play pianoforte.

Sonley Roush would subsequently split the group to place pb singer Wilson with another musician or 2. By this time Holmes had already left the group. Exist that equally it may, J. Frank Wilson (vocalist), Gene Croyle (guitar), Roland Atkinson (drums), Lewis Elliott (bass), and Jim Wynne (piano), along with Sonley Roush (manager/promoter) and Ron Newdoll (studio owner and engineer) were all present at Accurate Sound Recording studio in San Angelo around 1:00 pm in early August, 1964, when they made the record that would bring them lasting fame. The band worked all afternoon on the song, recording information technology over and over, with few pauses, for 3 straight hours, until Roush was satisfied with accept number 64. The record was commencement released locally, on Le Cam Records (#722), then on Tamara Records (#761), becoming a local hit. Eventually released on Josie Records (#923), a subsidiary of semi-major label Jubilee Records, the record became a national hit in the fall of 1964.

Released on September 5, 1964, Josie 923 spent 15 weeks on the charts, reaching number ii on November 7, held out of the height spot by "Baby Love", the second number 1 hit for The Supremes, which spent four weeks in the meridian spot. "Last Kiss" would spend 8 weeks in the tiptop ten; the record selling over one million copies, and propelling the resulting anthology onto the album charts. The Le Cam #722-A disc running time is noted as 2m 14s, while both the Tamara Records #761 release and the Josie Records #923 platter have a time of 2m 25s, an 11-second difference.

J. Frank Wilson and the Cavaliers had their start and only commercial success with "Terminal Kiss". Their cover version reached the top 10 in October, staying for eight weeks. It eventually reached number ii on the Billboard Hot 100 charts,[v] and as well earned the band a gilt record. Roush took a reconstituted version of the band, J. Frank Wilson, Gene Croyle, Bobby Wood, Jerome Graham, and Phil Trunzo, on a barbarous promotional tour, in back up of the record.

On a concert trip to Ohio, the band had just left Parkersburg, Due west Virginia, heading to Lima, Ohio, for a functioning at the Processed Pikestaff Club. At almost 5:xv a.1000., Roush apparently roughshod asleep at the wheel. The car drifted across the centerline and rammed caput-on into a trailer truck. Roush was killed instantly, just Wilson, sitting in the forepart seat, and Bobby Wood (vocalist / pianoforte) from Memphis, sitting in the back, both suffered serious injuries, including broken ribs and a broken ankle. Wilson went on with the tour, though, taking just a week off. People still remember him coming out on the stage on crutches to sing "Last Kiss" and "Hey, Piffling One". The accident had a curious outcome on record sales, nevertheless, pushing the vocal to number ii (it had previously stalled at number three) on the national charts.[6]

The Last Kiss album cover shows Wilson kneeling over the young woman portraying the dying girl. Supposedly, showtime printings of the encompass showed blood trickling down the girl's face, but it was air-brushed out by the record company for fear that alienating parents would limit sales of the album.

Wilson, with or without the Cavaliers, connected to record until 1978. He died on Oct four, 1991, due to alcoholism caused by business stresses and pain acquired from his injuries in the abandoned vehicle. He was 49 years old.[vii] [viii]

Chart functioning [edit]

Wed version [edit]

"Last Kiss"
Last Kiss - Wednesday.jpg
Single past Wednesday
from the anthology Final Kiss
B-side "Without You"
Released November 1973
Genre Popular
Characterization Ampex
Songwriter(due south)
  • Wayne Cochran
  • Joe Carpenter[1]
  • Randall Hoyal
  • Bobby McGlon
Producer(due south) John Dee Driscoll
Wednesday singles chronology
"Hang On Girl"
(1971)
"Terminal Kiss"
(1973)
"Teen Angel"
(1974)

In 1973, "Last Osculation" was covered past the Canadian grouping Wed. Their version reached number two in Canada and number 34 in the U.s.a.. It is ranked as the 27th biggest Canadian hit of 1973.[15] Their version climbed up the charts very slowly, and spent 3 weeks longer on the American charts than the Cavaliers' much bigger hit.[16]

Every bit a result of the popularity of Wednesday'south rendition, the Cavaliers' version was re-released (Virgo 506) at the end of 1973. Information technology reached number 92 in January 1974, spending a total of v weeks on the Billboard Hot 100. The original hit version re-charted 5 weeks later the version by Wednesday entered the charts.

Charts [edit]

Pearl Jam version [edit]

"Last Osculation"
PJLastKiss.jpg
Single past Pearl Jam
from the anthology No Boundaries: A Benefit for the Kosovar Refugees
B-side "Soldier of Honey"
Released June 8, 1999 (1999-06-08)
Recorded September nineteen, 1998
Studio Constitution Hall (Washington, D.C.)
Genre Culling rock
Length 3:xvi
Label Epic
Songwriter(south)
  • Wayne Cochran
  • Joe Carpenter[1]
  • Randall Hoyal
  • Bobby McGlon
Producer(south) Pearl Jam
Pearl Jam singles chronology
"Wishlist"
(1998)
"Last Kiss"
(1999)
"Zilch every bit It Seems"
(2000)

"Last Kiss" was also covered by American rock band Pearl Jam for the 1999 clemency album No Boundaries: A Do good for the Kosovar Refugees.[xx] Information technology would later announced on the group's 2003 rarities album Lost Dogs. This version was successful, specially in Australia, where it topped the ARIA Singles Chart for vii weeks. Information technology also reached number 1 in Iceland for half dozen weeks and peaked at number ii in the U.s. and Canada, making it the band's highest-charting unmarried in either country.

Origin and recording [edit]

The idea to cover "Last Kiss" came about after vocalist Eddie Vedder found an onetime record of the song at the Fremont Antique Mall in Seattle, Washington.[21] He convinced the rest of the band to try out the song and it was performed a few times on the ring'south 1998 tour. The band eventually recorded the song at a soundcheck at the Merriweather Post Pavilion in Columbia, Maryland in September of that year and released it as a 1998 fan club Christmas single.[22] The ring spent but a couple of thousand dollars mixing the song.[23] Bassist Jeff Ament said, "It was the virtually minimalist recording we've e'er done."[24]

Release and reception [edit]

In 1998, the comprehend of "Last Kiss" began to be played past radio stations and was ultimately put into heavy rotation across the United states of america. By popular need the comprehend was released to the public as a single on June 8, 1999, with the gain going to the aid of refugees of the Kosovo State of war.[22] The comprehend was featured on the 1999 charity compilation album, No Boundaries: A Benefit for the Kosovar Refugees.[25] The vocal helped earn about $10 one thousand thousand for Kosovo relief.[23]

The cover would finish up reaching number two on the US Billboard Hot 100, behind "If Yous Had My Love" by Jennifer Lopez. This remains Pearl Jam's highest-peaking song on the Billboard Hot 100. Information technology peaked at number iv on the Tiptop 40 Mainstream chart. The song reached number five on the Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks chart and number two on the Billboard Modernistic Rock Tracks chart. The "Last Buss" single has been certified gold by the RIAA.[26]

Outside the Usa, the song reached number 2 on the Canadian RPM Top Singles chart and became the band'southward highest-charting song in Canada. It later charted on the RPM Rock Report, where it reached number 4 and stayed there for two weeks. In Europe "Concluding Kiss" reached number 42 in the United kingdom and number 77 in the Netherlands. In Australasia, "Terminal Kiss" peaked atop the Australian ARIA Singles Nautical chart for seven weeks and became a peak-twenty success in New Zealand. It too reached number i in Iceland, staying at the summit for six weeks.

Christopher John Farley of Time said, "Information technology's a spare, morose song with Vedder's voice warbling lovelorn over a straight-ahead drum beat. Going dorsum to basics has put Pearl Jam back on elevation."[twenty] Regarding the cover, guitarist Stone Gossard said, "You can try album after anthology to write a hit and spend months getting drum sounds and rewriting lyrics, or you can get to a used record store and choice out a single and fall in honey with information technology."[27] Pearl Jam included "Final Osculation" on the 2003 B-sides and rarities album, Lost Dogs, and on the 2004 greatest hits album, rearviewmirror (Greatest Hits 1991–2003).

Live performances [edit]

Pearl Jam showtime performed its cover of "Last Osculation" live at the band's May vii, 1998, concert in Seattle, Washington, at ARO.space.[28] Alive performances past Pearl Jam of "Last Buss" tin can be establish on various official bootlegs and the Live at the Gorge 05/06 box set.

Runway listing [edit]

  1. "Last Kiss" (Wayne Cochran) – iii:15
  2. "Soldier of Beloved" (Buzz Cason, Tony Moon) – 2:54
  3. *Recorded live on September 19, 1998 at Constitution Hall in Washington, D.C.

Charts [edit]

Certifications [edit]

Release history [edit]

Other cover versions [edit]

The vocal has a long tradition in Latin American pop music. The most popular version was recorded in 1965 by Mexican singer Polo, (ex-member of Los Apson) with the title of "El Último Beso" in Spanish translated by the Mexican Television Director and lawn tennis teacher Omero Gonzalez, this Castilian version has been covered by several bands: Los American'south, Los Johnny Jets, Los 007, Los Doltons, as well singers as Argentine Leo Dan, and the Colombian singers Alci Acosta (his recording became a hitting in Colombia) and Harold Orozco [es] in 1967 too every bit José "Joseíto" Martínez in 1990, vocal with which he won a Congo de Oro in the Barranquilla Carnival.[60] Mexican vocalist-songwriter Gloria Trevi released her version of the vocal in 1989, peaking at number 36 on the Billboard Hot Latin Songs chart.

During the late 1970s, "Concluding Kiss" was covered by the Asparagus Valley Cultural Society and was too sometimes performed every bit the encore to their testify.[61]

In 2011, Trent Dabbs recorded a cover of "Concluding Osculation" for the hit television serial The Vampire Diaries in Season two, episode eighteen: "The Concluding Dance".

Meadow Ryann covered this on her debut cover album, Wings.

Cœur de Pirate covered the song for the soundtrack of the 2014 season of the Canadian Boob tube show, Trauma.

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c d "Joseph Edward Carpenter". The Thomaston Times. May 20, 2005. Archived from the original on July 17, 2011.
  2. ^ "Best Of '99: Author Of Pearl Jam's Biggest Hit Has God To Thank" Archived January i, 2009, at the Wayback Automobile. VH1.com. July 12, 1999.
  3. ^ "Forgotten Hits". Forgottenhits60s.blogspot.com. January 26, 2013. Retrieved July 22, 2015.
  4. ^ a b Inc, Nielsen Business organization Media (September 18, 1961). "Billboard". Nielsen Business Media, Inc. Retrieved November 22, 2017 – via Google Books.
  5. ^ "Last Kiss" past J. Frank Wilson And The Cavaliers". songfacts.com.
  6. ^ Matthew, Brian. "Sounds of the 60s". BBC Radio ii. September 26, 2009.
  7. ^ Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "J. Frank Wilson | Biography". AllMusic . Retrieved August 18, 2015.
  8. ^ Doc Rock. "The Dead Rock Stars Club 1990 - 1991". Thedeadrockstarsclub.com. Retrieved Baronial 18, 2015.
  9. ^ Flavour of New Zealand, xix November 1964Joel Whitburn'southward Elevation Popular Singles 1955-2002
  10. ^ Joel Whitburn's Top Pop Singles 1955-2002
  11. ^ "Cash Box Top 100 11/07/64". Tropicalglen.com. Archived from the original on Baronial 1, 2017. Retrieved November 22, 2017.
  12. ^ [Joel Whitburn's Pinnacle Popular Singles 1955-2002]
  13. ^ "Cash Box Top 100 1/12/74". Tropicalglen.com. Archived from the original on Feb 19, 2017. Retrieved November 22, 2017.
  14. ^ "Meridian 100 Hits of 1964/Pinnacle 100 Songs of 1964". Musicoutfitters.com . Retrieved September 27, 2016.
  15. ^ a b Canada, Library and Archives (February 8, 2017). "Image : RPM Weekly".
  16. ^ a b Joel Whitburn'due south Top Pop Singles 1955-1990 - ISBN 0-89820-089-X
  17. ^ Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992 (illustrated ed.). St Ives, N.Due south.W.: Australian Chart Book. p. 334. ISBN0-646-11917-vi.
  18. ^ Canada, Library and Athenaeum (July 17, 2013). "Image : RPM Weekly". Collectionscanada.gc.ca . Retrieved November 22, 2017.
  19. ^ Whitburn, Joel (1999). Pop Annual. Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin: Tape Inquiry Inc. ISBN0-89820-142-X.
  20. ^ a b Farley, Christopher John. "Last Kiss". Time. July 19, 1999.
  21. ^ Cohen, Jonathan. "The Pearl Jam Q & A: Lost Dogs". Billboard. 2003.
  22. ^ a b c d Pietroluongo, Silvio (May 29, 1999). "Hot 100 Singles Spotlight". Billboard. Vol. 111, no. 22. p. 97.
  23. ^ a b (2003) Album notes for Lost Dogs past Pearl Jam, [CD booklet]. New York: Sony Music.
  24. ^ Stout, Gene. "Pearl Jam's Ament has smaller fish to fry at festival" [ expressionless link ] . Seattle Mail service-Intelligencer. July 30, 1999.
  25. ^ "The Unofficial Pearl Jam FAQ". vitalogy.de.
  26. ^ a b "American single certifications – Pearl Jam – Terminal Kiss". Recording Industry Association of America.
  27. ^ Anderman, Joan. "Wisdom of Pearl". The Boston Globe. May 24, 2006.
  28. ^ "Pearl Jam Songs: "Terminal Kiss"" Archived May 27, 2009, at the Wayback Machine. pearljam.com.
  29. ^ "Pearl Jam – Last Kiss". ARIA Top fifty Singles.
  30. ^ "Pearl Jam – Last Kiss" (in Dutch). Ultratip.
  31. ^ "Peak RPM Singles: Upshot 8449." RPM. Library and Athenaeum Canada. Retrieved October 19, 2018.
  32. ^ "Meridian RPM Developed Contemporary: Issue 8466." RPM. Library and Archives Canada. Retrieved October 19, 2018.
  33. ^ "Elevation RPM Rock/Culling Tracks: Outcome 8368." RPM. Library and Archives Canada. Retrieved October xix, 2018.
  34. ^ "Íslenski Listinn (two.8–5.eight. 1999)". Dagblaðið Vísir (in Icelandic). August six, 1999. p. x. Retrieved October 5, 2019.
  35. ^ "Pearl Jam – Final Kiss" (in Dutch). Single Top 100.
  36. ^ "Pearl Jam – Last Buss". Height 40 Singles.
  37. ^ "Official Scottish Singles Sales Chart Height 100". Official Charts Company. Retrieved October 19, 2018.
  38. ^ "Official Singles Chart Tiptop 100". Official Charts Company. Retrieved October 19, 2018.
  39. ^ "Official Rock & Metal Singles Chart Acme 40". Official Charts Company. Retrieved October xix, 2018.
  40. ^ "Pearl Jam Nautical chart History (Hot 100)". Billboard. Retrieved September half-dozen, 2020.
  41. ^ "Pearl Jam Chart History (Adult Culling Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved September six, 2020.
  42. ^ "Pearl Jam Chart History (Developed Pop Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved September half dozen, 2020.
  43. ^ "Pearl Jam Chart History (Alternative Airplay)". Billboard. Retrieved September 6, 2020.
  44. ^ "Pearl Jam Nautical chart History (Mainstream Stone)". Billboard. Retrieved September 6, 2020.
  45. ^ "Pearl Jam Chart History (Pop Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved September 6, 2020.
  46. ^ "Pearl Jam Awards". AllMusic. Archived from the original on July 15, 2016. Retrieved September 6, 2020.
  47. ^ "ARIA Charts – End of Year Charts – Meridian 100 Singles 1999". ARIA. Retrieved April ii, 2020.
  48. ^ "RPM 1999 Top 100 Hit Tracks". RPM. Library and Athenaeum Canada. Retrieved October 19, 2018.
  49. ^ "RPM 1999 Top 100 Developed Contemporary". RPM. Library and Archives Canada. Retrieved October 19, 2018.
  50. ^ "RPM 1999 Acme 50 Rock Tracks". RPM. Library and Archives Canada. Retrieved October 19, 2018.
  51. ^ "Billboard Peak 100 – 1999". Archived from the original on July 9, 2009. Retrieved Baronial 28, 2010.
  52. ^ a b "1999 – The Yr in Music" (PDF). Billboard. Vol. 111, no. 52. December 25, 1999. p. 138. Retrieved Apr ii, 2020.
  53. ^ "Canada's Acme 200 Singles of 2001". Jam!. Archived from the original on January 26, 2003. Retrieved March 26, 2022.
  54. ^ "Canada's Pinnacle 200 Singles of 2002". Jam!. Jan 14, 2003. Archived from the original on September 6, 2004. Retrieved March 22, 2022.
  55. ^ Lwin, Nanda. "Top 100 singles of the 1990s". Jam!. Archived from the original on Baronial 29, 2000. Retrieved March 26, 2022.
  56. ^ "ARIA Charts – Accreditations – 1999 Singles" (PDF). Australian Recording Industry Association.
  57. ^ "Best-Selling Records of 1999". Billboard. Vol. 112, no. iv. BPI Communications Inc. January 22, 2000. p. 63. ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved June four, 2015.
  58. ^ "Going for Adds" (PDF). Radio & Records. No. 1302. June iv, 1999. p. 42. Retrieved July 26, 2021.
  59. ^ "New Releases – For Calendar week Starting 2 Baronial, 1999: Singles" (PDF). Music Calendar week. July 31, 1999. p. 27. Retrieved July 26, 2021.
  60. ^ "ECHE".
  61. ^ "Asparagus Valley Cultural Society Shares Music, Magic, and Comedy". Fresh Air Archive: Interviews with Terry Gross.

huynhoveass.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Last_Kiss

0 Response to "I Have to Be Good So I Can See My Baby Again"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel