Vic Damone - Songs

Songs

The following songs recorded by Damone made the Billboard charts:

  • "An Affair to Remember" (#16) (1957)
  • "Again" (#6) (1949) (arguably a bigger hit for Doris Day and Gordon Jenkins, but a gold record for Damone)
  • "April in Portugal" (#10) (1953)
  • "Calla Calla" (#13) (1951)
  • "Can Anyone Explain? (No! No! No!)" (#25) (1950) (bigger hit for The Ames Brothers)
  • "Cincinnati Dancing Pig" (#11) (1950)
  • "Do I Love You (Because You’re Beautiful)" (#62) (1957)
  • "Ebb Tide" (#10) (1953)
  • "Eternally (The Song From Limelight)" (#12) (1953)
  • "Four Winds and Seven Seas" (#16) (1949)
  • "Gigi" (#88) (1958)
  • "God’s Country" (#27) (1950)
  • "Here in My Heart" (#8) (1952) (bigger hit for Al Martino)
  • "If" (#28) (1951) (bigger hit for Perry Como)
  • "I Have But One Heart" (#7) (1947)
  • "It’s Magic" (#24) (1948) (bigger hit for Doris Day)
  • "Jump Through the Ring" (#22) (1952)
  • "Just Say I Love Her" (#13) (1950)
  • "Longing for You" (#12) (1951)
  • "Music By the Angels" (#18) (1950)
  • "My Bolero" (#10) (1949)
  • "My Heart Cries for You" (#4) (1950) (bigger hit for Guy Mitchell)
  • "My Truly, Truly Fair" (#4) (1951) (bigger hit for Guy Mitchell)
  • "On the Street Where You Live" (#4) (1956)
  • "Por Favor" (#73) (1955)
  • "Rosanne" (#23) (1952)
  • "Say Something Sweet to Your Sweetheart" (#23) (1948) (duet with Patti Page)
  • "Sugar" (#13) (1953)
  • "Sitting By the Window" (#29) (1950)
  • "Take My Heart" (#30) (1952)
  • "Tell Me You Love Me" (#21) (1951)
  • "Tomorrow Never Comes" 1952
  • "Tzena, Tzena, Tzena" (#7) (1950) (bigger hit for The Weavers)
  • "Vagabond Shoes" (#17) (1950)
  • "War and Peace" (#59) (1956)
  • "Why Was I Born?" (#20) (1949)
  • "Wonder Why" (#21) (1951)
  • "You Do" (#7) (1947)
  • "You're Breaking My Heart" (#1) (1949) (Damone's 2nd gold record and his biggest hit)
  • "You Were Only Fooling (While I Was Falling in Love)" (#30) (1965)

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Famous quotes containing the word songs:

    And songs climb out of the flames of the near campfires,
    Pale, pastel things exquisite in their frailness
    With a note or two to indicate it isn’t lost,
    On them at least. The songs decorate our notion of the world
    And mark its limits, like a frieze of soap-bubbles.
    John Ashbery (b. 1927)

    We who with songs beguile your pilgrimage
    And swear that Beauty lives though lilies die,
    We Poets of the proud old lineage
    Who sing to find your hearts, we know not why,
    James Elroy Flecker (1884–1919)

    The hills are alive with the sound of music, with songs they have sung for a thousand years.
    Oscar Hammerstein II (1895–1960)