Succession
Preceded by "Don't Forbid Me" by Pat Boone |
U.S. Billboard Top 100 number-one single (Tab Hunter version) February 16, 1957 (6 weeks) |
Succeeded by "Butterfly" by Andy Williams |
Preceded by "Too Much" by Elvis Presley |
U.S. Billboard Best Sellers in Stores number-one single (Tab Hunter version) March 2, 1957 (4 weeks) |
Succeeded by "Party Doll" by Buddy Knox |
Preceded by "Singing the Blues" by Guy Mitchell |
U.S. Billboard Most Played by Jockeys number-one single February 9, 1957 (one week) by Sonny James February 16, 1957 (6 weeks) by Tab Hunter |
Succeeded by "Butterfly" by Andy Williams |
Preceded by "Don't Forbid Me" by Pat Boone |
U.S. Billboard Most Played in Jukeboxes number-one single (Tab Hunter version) March 2, 1957 (one week) |
Succeeded by "Too Much" by Elvis Presley |
Preceded by "Too Much" by Elvis Presley |
U.S. Billboard Most Played in Jukeboxes number-one single (Tab Hunter version) March 16, 1957 (4 weeks) |
Succeeded by "Butterfly" by Charlie Gracie |
Preceded by "Singing the Blues" by Guy Mitchell |
Cash Box magazine best selling record chart #1 record (Tab Hunter version) February 2, 1957–February 9, 1957 |
Succeeded by "Too Much" by Elvis Presley |
Preceded by "Too Much" by Elvis Presley |
Cash Box magazine best selling record chart #1 record (Tab Hunter version) March 9, 1957–March 30, 1957 |
Succeeded by "Party Doll" by Buddy Knox |
Preceded by "Singing the Blues" by Marty Robbins |
C&W Best Seller in Stores number one single by Sonny James February 2, 1957 |
Succeeded by "Gone" by Ferlin Husky |
Preceded by "I'm the Leader of the Gang (I Am)" by Gary Glitter |
UK number one single (Donny Osmond version) August 25, 1973 for four weeks |
Succeeded by "Angel Fingers (A Teen Ballad)" by Wizzard |
Read more about this topic: Young Love (1956 Song)
Famous quotes containing the word succession:
“There is the illusion of time, which is very deep; who has disposed of it? Mor come to the conviction that what seems the succession of thought is only the distribution of wholes into causal series.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)
“What is this world of ours? A complex entity subject to sudden changes which all indicate a tendency to destruction; a swift succession of beings which follow one another, assert themselves and disappear; a fleeting symmetry; a momentary order.”
—Denis Diderot (17131784)
“The historic ascent of humanity, taken as a whole, may be summarized as a succession of victories of consciousness over blind forcesin nature, in society, in man himself.”
—Leon Trotsky (18791940)