My Heart Belongs to Only You

http://dbpedia.org/resource/My_Heart_Belongs_to_Only_You an entity of type: Thing

"My Heart Belongs to Only You" is a song written by Frank Daniels & Dorothy Daniels. Bette McLaurin and June Christy both released versions of the song in 1952. The most successful version of the song was recorded by Bobby Vinton on October 23, 1963, and released in February 1964. In 1953, the song reached No. 27 on Cash Box's chart of "The Nation's Top 50 Best Selling Records", in a tandem ranking of June Christy, Bette McLaurin, Arbee Stidham, and Terry Timmons' recordings, with Christy and McLaurin's versions marked as bestsellers. rdf:langString
rdf:langString My Heart Belongs to Only You
rdf:langString My Heart Belongs to Only You
rdf:langString My Heart Belongs to Only You
xsd:integer 48203839
xsd:integer 1059342782
rdf:langString Warm and Tender
xsd:integer 1964
xsd:integer 1963
xsd:date 1963-10-23
rdf:langString February 1964
rdf:langString single
rdf:langString Frank Daniels & Dorothy Daniels
rdf:langString "My Heart Belongs to Only You" is a song written by Frank Daniels & Dorothy Daniels. Bette McLaurin and June Christy both released versions of the song in 1952. The most successful version of the song was recorded by Bobby Vinton on October 23, 1963, and released in February 1964. In 1953, the song reached No. 27 on Cash Box's chart of "The Nation's Top 50 Best Selling Records", in a tandem ranking of June Christy, Bette McLaurin, Arbee Stidham, and Terry Timmons' recordings, with Christy and McLaurin's versions marked as bestsellers. Mary Swan released a version of "My Heart Belongs to Only You" in 1958. Swan performed the song on Dick Clark's American Bandstand. Jackie Wilson released a version of "My Heart Belongs to Only You" in 1961, which spent 6 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, peaking at No. 65, while reaching No. 48 on the Cash Box Top 100.The Standards released their version in 1963 on Chess records.Bobby Vinton recorded the most successful version of "My Heart Belongs to Only You" on October 23, 1963, backed by arranger/conductor Stan Applebaum, and which was released in February 1964. It was released as a single and on the album There! I've Said It Again. Bobby Vinton's version spent 9 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, peaking at No. 9, while reaching No. 2 on Billboard's Middle-Road Singles chart, No. 8 on the Cash Box Top 100, No. 8 on the Music Vendor Top 100 Pop chart, and No. 15 on Canada's CHUM Hit Parade.
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xsd:nonNegativeInteger 6340
xsd:date 1963-10-23
xsd:double 162.0

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