

Download_DATA
Download_Bonus Track
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Bónusz
Pajkos nő az árnyas utcán
Vámosi János - Harmónia vokal
/Ames Brothers - Naughty Lady Of Shady Lane /
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Original
Ames Brothers - Can Anyone Explain
Ames Brothers - Cruising Down The River
Ames Brothers - DryBones
Ames Brothers - Hawaiian War Chant
Ames Brothers - Im Looking Over A Four Leaf Clover
Ames Brothers - It Only Urts For A Little While
Ames Brothers - Jambalaya
Ames Brothers - Melodie d'Amour
Ames Brothers - Music! Music! Music!
Ames Brothers - Naughty Lady Of Shady Lane
Ames Brothers - Rag Mop
Ames Brothers - Sentimental Me
Ames Brothers - Stars are the Windows of Heave
Ames Brothers - Undecided
Ames Brothers - You You You
A  close-harmony vocal quartet with few equals during the '50s, the Ames  Brothers hit number one in 1950 with "Sentimental Me," and found their  biggest hit three years later
with  "You, You, You." Though they were indeed a family group, the Ames  Brothers' surname was actually Urick. Joe, Gene, Vic and Ed were all  born within four short years of each other in Malden, Massachusetts.  After winning a few talent contests in their hometown, the group moved  to Boston and began performing in nightclubs. They soon made the leap to  New York and even Los Angeles, and signed to the Coral label in late  1958. After a few moderate hits, the Ames Brothers hit big in early 1950  with a double-sided number one hit, "Rag Mop"/"Sentimental Me." The  B-side eventually triumphed over its flip, and the group hit again later  in 1951 with "Undecided." The biggest hit of the Ames Brothers' career  was 1953's "You You You," and their continued success during 1954 with  "The Naughty Lady of Shady Land" bore fruit in the form of their own  television program.
Though  the quartet continued to record throughout the '50s, the dawn of the  rock era definitely damaged their career; the group managed two Top Ten  hits in 1957 ("Tammy," "Melodie d'Amour"), but then folded in 1959. Ed,  the youngest Ames brother, continued a performing career and appeared as  an Indian named Mingo on the Daniel Boone TV series before hitting the  Top Ten as a solo act with 1967's "My Cup Runneth Over." He also  appeared on Broadway.
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