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・ Linda Newell
・ Linda Newton
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・ Linda Nochlin
・ Linda Nolan
・ Linda Nordlund
・ Linda November
・ Linda Lanzillotta
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・ Linda Lappe
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Linda Laurie
・ Linda Lavarch
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・ Linda Lawson
・ Linda Lawson (actress)
・ Linda Lawson (politician)
・ Linda Le
・ Linda Leatherbarrow
・ Linda Leatherdale
・ Linda LeBourdais
・ Linda Lee
・ Linda Lee (bridge)
・ Linda Lee Alter
・ Linda Lee Cadwell
・ Linda Lee Thomas


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Linda Laurie : ウィキペディア英語版
Linda Laurie

Linda Laurie (born Linda Gertz, 1941; died November 20, 2009) was an American singer and songwriter, best known for the novelty record "Ambrose (Part 5)", which went to #52 on the ''Billboard'' chart while she was still a high school student in 1959.
=="Ambrose (Part 5)"==
While attending Abraham Lincoln High School in Brooklyn, New York, Laurie wrote and recorded a number of demo records, including "Sunglasses", which Linda recorded with her friend Linda Yellin as the "Knott Sisters"; it failed to chart.
Another of Linda's songs was an odd tale of a girl walking through a dark subway tunnel with her boyfriend Ambrose, who implores her to "just keep walking". She recorded the number for Glory Records in late 1958 and took it around to radio stations, who liked the deep-throated Ambrose (which Laurie voiced herself) and bizarre non-sequiturs like "we haven't got a color telephone".
"Ambrose (Part 5)" (despite the name, there were no parts one through four) entered the Billboard charts in January 1959 and peaked at #52 in March. (The flip side, "Ooh, What A Lover", also received some airplay.) The song's notoriety was enough to get young Linda on the February 10, 1959 edition of To Tell The Truth; only two of the four panelists correctly identified her. A follow-up, "Forever Ambrose", in which the pair leave the subway tunnel and Ambrose even sings, failed to hit the charts.
From 1960-64, she made a number of other recordings for various small labels: “Stay with Me” (Andie 5015); “Chico” (Keetch 6001); “Lucky” (Recona 3502); “Prince Charming” (Rust 5022); and “Stay-At-Home Sue” (Rust 5042), a musical rejoinder to Dion's “Runaround Sue.” In 1962, Linda reconnected with Ambrose in “The Return of Ambrose” (Rust 5061).

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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