Fascinating pics...and I've always loved this song by the delectable duo of Patience & Prudence McIntyre. Quite a combination! Enjoyed seeing it today for the first time. THANKS for sharing it with us! CHEERS! :)
Their Dad Mark McIntyre, was an orchestra leader pianist, songwriter. In 1956, he brought his daughters, 11-year-old Prudence & 14-year-old Patience, into the Liberty Records studio in Los Angeles. They made a demo of Tonight You Belong to Me, which had been a hit for Gene Austin in 1927, written by Billy Rose & Lee David. Liberty signed them; the song reached #4 & was the biggest selling record by Liberty for two years. Their next hit Gonna Get Along without Ya Now, reached #11.
A quite good version and in a very "heavily populated field". Who has not recorded this and yet this knocks spots of many of the other versions,
mcpratt 1 year ago
Fascinating pics...and I've always loved this song by the delectable duo of Patience & Prudence McIntyre. Quite a combination! Enjoyed seeing it today for the first time. THANKS for sharing it with us! CHEERS! :)
JubalCalif 1 year ago
Actually it came out in 1952 by Teresa Brewer except not many give her credit for it which is sad. She also sang "music, music, music"
I have the original song on my profile
HroseG 2 years ago
Where is Ray Liottas' wife in Goodfellas?
serel69do 3 years ago
I think that Patience is the younger daughter and was 11 year old. Prudence was 14.
Voex1966 3 years ago
That would be Frances McDormand in "Fargo".
glangorous 3 years ago
I have a question. What movie is the image at 1:10 from? I keep seeing this picture everywhere, and I'd really like to find out where it's from.
ginchu11 3 years ago
just love this version what a crack up? sweet melodies and bad bad women hahaa
latykai 3 years ago
Their Dad Mark McIntyre, was an orchestra leader pianist, songwriter. In 1956, he brought his daughters, 11-year-old Prudence & 14-year-old Patience, into the Liberty Records studio in Los Angeles. They made a demo of Tonight You Belong to Me, which had been a hit for Gene Austin in 1927, written by Billy Rose & Lee David. Liberty signed them; the song reached #4 & was the biggest selling record by Liberty for two years. Their next hit Gonna Get Along without Ya Now, reached #11.
sepod 3 years ago
Great song! Thanks. KVS (class of 1961)
kvssgh 3 years ago