Tony Conigliaro - Little Red Scooter Putt Putt I Cant Get Over You
Table of Contents
Download
Filename: tony-conigliaro-little-red-scooter-putt-putt-i-cant-get-over.rar- MP3 size: 7.4 mb
- FLAC size: 63.8 mb
Tracks
Track | Duration | Preview |
---|---|---|
Little Red Scotter (Putt-Putt) | 2:15 | |
I Can't Get Over You | 2:02 |
Video
I Can't Get Over You by Tony Conigliaro
Little Red Scooter by Tony Conigliaro
Images
Catalog Numbers
47-8577Labels
RCA VictorListen online
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Formats
- Vinyl
- 7"
- 45 RPM
- Single
- Mono
Companies
Role | Company |
---|---|
Record Company | Radio Corporation Of America |
Published By | Skidmore Music Co. Inc. |
Credits
Role | Credit |
---|---|
Arranged By | Charles Calello |
Producer | Al Kasha |
Notes
- Side A published by Rhodora Mus. BMI.
- Side B published by Skidmore Mus. Co. ASCAP
Barcodes
- Matrix / Runout (Side A Label): SPKM-5369- 1 S
- Matrix / Runout (Side B Label): SPKM-5368 - 1 S
- Rights Society (A): BMI
- Rights Society (B): ASCAP
About Tony Conigliaro
American baseball player and Pop singer.
Born: January 7, 1945 in Revere, Massachusetts
Died: February 24, 1990 in Salem, Massachusetts
He play for the Boston Red Sox from 1964 till 1970, but his promising career
(He holds the MLB record for most home runs hit by a teenage player)
was derailed when he suffered a severe eye injury after being hit in the face by a pitch in 1967.
Already in 1964, his rookie year, Conigliaro was a well-known Boston nightclub frequenter
and regularly performed as a singer. Word of his talent reached the producer ,
who made him record two 45s, released on the specifically created .
Following a good sales success, he got a contract with , for which he recorded 3 singles
without getting the success hoped for by the label, which terminated the contract in 1966.
Real Name
- Anthony Richard Conigliaro
Comments
Tony C. could sing too.
Ok
Tony died in 1990 at the age of 45. One of the great "What if's" in baseball history
Played against Tony in Babe Ruth league. He hit one about 400 feet of me.
Thanks for archiving this nostalgic piece of Americana.
I saw Tony do this on some late night talk show.It may have been Carson or Bishop.
WRKO must have played this song ten times a day in 1967.
He was a charasmatic hitting sensation. I'm sure he would've been a Hall of Famer.
Living here in Boston is considered a legend here. This was his biggest record here in New England. He had several other local hits.
Pretty good.
Edit: It occurs to me that he may have discussed singing in his book, but I read that when I was about nine or ten.