Ko Ko Mo (I Love You So)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ko_Ko_Mo_(I_Love_You_So) an entity of type: Thing

"Ko Ko Mo (I Love You So)" is a popular rock novelty song written in late 1954 by the rhythm and blues partnership of Forest Gene Wilson and Eunice Levy, and also credited to Jake Porter. One of the earliest rock and roll songs, it was probably "the most extensively recorded rock 'n' roll song of that time". rdf:langString
rdf:langString Ko Ko Mo (I Love You So)
rdf:langString Ko Ko Mo (I Love You So)
rdf:langString Ko Ko Mo
xsd:integer 6732344
xsd:integer 1097580205
rdf:langString Gene and Eunice
rdf:langString You'll Always Be My Lifetime Sweetheart
rdf:langString Forest Gene Wilson, Eunice Levy
rdf:langString Big band, Traditional pop, R&B, Doo-wop, Swing music
rdf:langString Novelty song, rock
rdf:langString Combo, Aladdin Records
<second> 160.0
rdf:langString Chop Chop Boom
xsd:integer 1955
xsd:integer 1955
xsd:integer 1954
xsd:integer 1955
xsd:date 1955-01-04
xsd:integer 1955
rdf:langString Ko Ko Mo
rdf:langString single
rdf:langString Forest Gene Wilson, Jake Porter, Eunice Levy
rdf:langString "Ko Ko Mo (I Love You So)" is a popular rock novelty song written in late 1954 by the rhythm and blues partnership of Forest Gene Wilson and Eunice Levy, and also credited to Jake Porter. One of the earliest rock and roll songs, it was probably "the most extensively recorded rock 'n' roll song of that time". Originally recorded by rhythm and blues duo Gene and Eunice (Wilson and Levy) in November 1954 on the Combo label and again in January 1955 on the Aladdin label, it was covered by at least 17 different musicians in the first few months of 1955 alone, including Perry Como, The Crew-Cuts, The Charms, Louis Armstrong and Gary Crosby, Goldie Hill & Red Sovine, Hawkshaw Hawkins and Rita Robbins, The Hutton Sisters (Marion Hutton and Betty Hutton), The Flamingos, Ronnie Aldrich and The Squads, Tito Rodríguez, Big Dave and His Orchestra, Marvin & Johnny, Barry Frank (with the Four Bells), Bill Darnell & Betty Clooney, Jack Cardwell with Jackie Hill, and The Dooley Sisters. Andy Griffith also recorded a satirical parody of the song. The song spent 15 weeks in the Billboard charts from January to May 1955, and peaked at #3 in its Honor Roll of Hits in the week ending March 2, 1955. The version by Perry Como, RCA's first rock 'n' roll release, was the most successful, reaching #2 on the Billboard charts in February 1955, while a version by The Crew-Cuts reached #6 on the Pop charts that same month. Gene and Eunice's versions were on the charts for 7 weeks and reached #6 on the Billboard R&B charts.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 41081

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