As Brown later told Newsday, a local disc jockey named Alan Courtney had the idea for lyrics built ... Bonney starts the song by asking, “Hello, Joe, whaddaya know?” DiMaggio, voiced by ...
His fame was recorded in song and prose. In the sixties, when Simon and Garfunkel wanted to express a longing for another time, they wrote in "Mrs. Robinson": "Where have you gone, Joe DiMaggio?
His fame was recorded in song and prose. In the 1960s, when Simon and Garfunkel wanted to express a longing for another time, they wrote in "Mrs. Robinson": "Where have you gone, Joe DiMaggio?