Melting Pot (song)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Melting_Pot_(song) an entity of type: Thing

"Melting Pot" is the 1969 debut single from UK pop group Blue Mink. The song was written by Blue Mink's lead singer Roger Cook and long-time songwriter partner Roger Greenaway. The song peaked at number three in the UK Singles chart in the first week of 1970, number 10 in Australia, and also reached number 11 in Ireland. "Melting Pot" did best in New Zealand, where it spent three weeks at number 2. It became the opening track on the group's 1969 debut album, also titled Melting Pot. While the song has assimilationist undertones, it is generally considered a plea for racial harmony. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Melting Pot (song)
rdf:langString Melting Pot
rdf:langString Melting Pot
xsd:integer 40712122
xsd:integer 1113866973
rdf:langString Melting Pot
rdf:langString When the Cat's Away
rdf:langString Blue Mink
rdf:langString Cover of the single released in Germany
rdf:langString Blue Mink - Melting Pot.jpg
rdf:langString When the Cat's Away - Melting Pot.jpg
rdf:langString CBS
rdf:langString Philips
<second> 230.0
xsd:integer 1970 1990
rdf:langString Sanctified
xsd:integer 1987
rdf:langString Blue Mink
xsd:integer 1988
xsd:integer 1988
xsd:date 1969-10-31
rdf:langString single
rdf:langString * Roger Cook * Roger Greenaway
rdf:langString Roger Cook and Roger Greenaway
rdf:langString "Melting Pot" is the 1969 debut single from UK pop group Blue Mink. The song was written by Blue Mink's lead singer Roger Cook and long-time songwriter partner Roger Greenaway. The song peaked at number three in the UK Singles chart in the first week of 1970, number 10 in Australia, and also reached number 11 in Ireland. "Melting Pot" did best in New Zealand, where it spent three weeks at number 2. It became the opening track on the group's 1969 debut album, also titled Melting Pot. While the song has assimilationist undertones, it is generally considered a plea for racial harmony. The song featured on episode 3 of I'm Alan Partridge series 1, entitled "Watership Alan", in which Alan sings the song whilst exercising in his hotel room alongside Michael, the caretaker, who is clearing out an air vent. Alan asks Michael whether the song is racist, but Michael says no on the basis that Chinese is both a race of people and a food.
<minute> 3.8333333333333335
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 6544
xsd:date 1969-10-31
xsd:double 230.0

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