Gale Storm - Lucky Lips download song

  • Artist: Gale Storm
  • Song: Lucky Lips
  • Genre: Pop
  • Length: 02:12
  • Size: 5.2MB
  • Bitrate: 320Kbps
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Download Gale Storm - Lucky Lips

Top songs Gale Storm

# Song Bitrate Length
1 Gale Storm - I Hear You Knocking 256 02:23
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3 Gale Storm - In a Golden Coach 320 02:35
4 Gale Storm - Ivory Tower 256 02:44
5 Gale Storm - Memories Are Made Of This 256 02:24
6 Gale Storm - Sweet Georgia Brown 256 02:08
7 Gale Storm - Tell Me Why 320 02:36
8 Gale Storm - Tell Me Why, Pt 2 320 02:32
9 Gale Storm - That's My Desire 320 02:46

Comments

Quan Vibes

2022-08-12 14:00:18 | Profile
GALE STORM was a good singer that should be rembered

Jazzlyn Nolen

2022-06-19 05:43:44 | Profile
Hello Mark Gallagher!    Thanks a million for posting this delightful song!

California Caleb

2022-03-26 19:38:56 | Profile
This was first recorded by Miss Ruth Brown in 1957.

Callie West

2022-02-22 22:12:53 | Profile
To Markalson1938. I knew that Gale was a big band singer. Thats why I said its about time they found an actor who could sing. Imet Gale a few years before she left us. What a wonderful person. No air around her. Just a normal down to earth person.

Милана Айбазова

2021-08-17 08:57:02 | Profile
Lousy hubbies helped her to those bottles etc

zoomcats

2020-12-25 04:40:15 | Profile
Best version I have heard of this song.  A very good singer and very good atsinging rhythm and blues.  And hey, back in those days popular songs wererecorded by a whole lot of other singers. Charlie Gracie´s million-seller, "Butterfly",was copied by Andy Williams (who also sold a million), but also by the old big-band singer Bob Carroll, who also scored a minor hit with "Butterfly" only going as high as no.61. Bill Allen also recorded the song as well as Billy Williams who himself was a black singer. Record companies wanted their own versions of popular songs. Gale Storm, Bill Haley, Pat Boone and Elvis Presley are often accused to be stealing black peoples songs but that was not the case. Fats Domino even thanked Pat Boone in public because Pat´s version of "Ain´t That A Shame" had paid the diamond ring Domino wore on one of his fingers. And black record people could ask white record companies to cut their songs in order to make their songs popular.