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・ Tommy Svindal Larsen
・ Tommy Sword
・ Tommy Sylvestre
・ Tommy Söderberg
・ Tommy Söderström
・ Tommy Tabermann
・ Tommy Taggart
・ Tommy Tait
・ Tommy Tait (footballer, born 1879)
・ Tommy Tait (footballer, born 1908)
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Tommy Roe
・ Tommy Roe (footballer)
・ Tommy Rogers
・ Tommy Rogers (wrestler)
・ Tommy Rooney
・ Tommy Ross (footballer)
・ Tommy Rovelstad
・ Tommy Rowe
・ Tommy Rowe (footballer, born 1913)
・ Tommy Rowland
・ Tommy Rowlands
・ Tommy Rudkin
・ Tommy Runar
・ Tommy Rustad
・ Tommy Rutter


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Tommy Roe : ウィキペディア英語版
Tommy Roe

Thomas David "Tommy" Roe (born May 9, 1942, Atlanta, Georgia) is an American pop music singer-songwriter.
Best-remembered for his hits "Sheila" (1962) and "Dizzy" (1969), Roe was "widely perceived as one of the archetypal bubblegum artists of the late 1960s, but cut some pretty decent rockers along the way, especially early in his career", wrote the Allmusic journalist Bill Dahl.〔
==Biography==
Roe was raised in Atlanta where he attended Brown High School.〔 After graduating, he landed a job at General Electric soldering wires.
He had a ''Billboard'' number 1 hit in the U.S. and Australia in 1962 with the track "Sheila". A buildup of global sales of "Sheila" meant that the R.I.A.A. did not present the gold record until 1969.〔 When "Sheila" became a hit, ABC-Paramount Records asked him to go on tour to promote the hit. He was reluctant to give up his secure job at GE until ABC-Paramount advanced him $5,000.

However, in March 1963, the UK music magazine ''NME'' reported that he and Chris Montez had both been upstaged by The Beatles and their fans on a 21-day UK tour. Late that year Roe scored a Top 10 hit with "Everybody", which reached US number 3 and UK number 9, and "The Folk Singer" (number 4 UK)〔 written by Merle Kilgore was also popular.
Following a more successful tour of the United Kingdom by his friend Roy Orbison, Roe toured there and then moved to England where he lived for several years. In 1964 Roe recorded a song written by Buzz Cason entitled, "Diane From Manchester Square." It was a story in song about a girl called Diane, who worked in an upstairs office at EMI House, when it was based in London's Manchester Square. Sales of this single in the UK were poor, and it failed to chart. During the 1960s, he had several more Top 40 hits, including 1966's number 8 "Sweet Pea" (number 1 Canada) and number 6 "Hooray for Hazel" (number 2 Canada).〔 In 1969, his song "Dizzy" went to number 1 on the UK Singles Chart,〔 number 1 in Canada, as well as number 1 in the U.S. ''Billboard'' Hot 100. This transatlantic chart-topper sold two million copies by mid-April 1969, giving him his third gold disc award.〔
Roe guest-starred in an episode of the American sitcom, ''Green Acres'', called "The Four of Spades", which first aired on 8 November 1969, one week to the day before the Hot 100 debut of his final Top 10 single, a track co-written with Freddy Weller, "Jam Up and Jelly Tight", which became his fourth gold record, peaking at number 8 in the U.S. and number 5 in Canada.
In 1986 Roe was inducted into the Georgia Music Hall of Fame, and his pioneering contribution to the genre has been recognized by the Rockabilly Hall of Fame. Although his style of music declined in popularity with the 1970s mass market, he maintained a following and continued to perform at a variety of concert venues, sometimes with 1960s nostalgia rock and rollers such as Freddy Cannon and Bobby Vee.

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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