Walk On By

Walk On By may refer to:

  • "Walk On By (song)", first recorded by Dionne Warwick and covered by several other artists
  • "Walk On By" (Leroy Van Dyke song)
  • "Walk On By", a song by Britney Spears from Oops!... I Did It Again
  • "Walk On By", a song by Cake from Prolonging the Magic
  • "Walk On By", a song by Fat Joe from Don Cartagena
  • "Walk On By", a song by Miss Kittin & The Hacker from First Album
  • "Walk On By", a song by Young Deenay from Birth
  • Walk On By: The Story of Popular Song, a BBC documentary series that was nominated for a 2002 British Academy Television Award
  • Walk On By (album), a 1966 album by jazz organist Brother Jack McDuff
  • Walk On By (album)

    Walk On By is an album by organist Jack McDuff recorded in 1966 and released on the Prestige label.

    Reception

    Allmusic awarded the album 3 stars.

    Track listing

    All compositions by Jack McDuff except as indicated

  • "Walk On By" (Burt Bacharach, Hal David) - 2:38
  • "Around the Corner" - 6:44
  • "Haitian Lady" (Harold Ousley) - 5:43
  • "Talking 'Bout My Woman" (Sidney Barnes, J. J. Jackson) - 2:1
  • "Jersey Bounce" (Tiny Bradshaw, Eddie Johnson, Bobby Plater, Buddy Feyne) - 2:30
  • "For Those Who Choose" (Ousley) - 4:09
  • "Too Many Fish in the Sea" (Eddie Holland, Norman Whitfield) - 2:17
  • "There Is No Greater Love" (Isham Jones, Marty Symes) - 5:16
  • "Song of the Soul" (Ousley) - 4:16
  • Personnel

  • Jack McDuff - organ
  • Red Holloway (tracks 2 & 8), Harold Ousley (tracks 3, 6 & 9) - tenor saxophone
  • Pat Martino - guitar
  • Joe Dukes - drums
  • Unidentified orchestra arranged and conducted by Benny Golson (tracks 1, 4, 5 & 8)
  • References

    Walk On By (Leroy Van Dyke song)

    "Walk on By" is a song written by Kendall Hayes and performed by American country music artist Leroy Van Dyke. It was released in June 1961 as the first single and title track from the album Walk On By. The song was Van Dyke's most successful single, spending 37 weeks on the country chart and a record-breaking 19 at the number-one position. "Walk on By" crossed over to the pop chart peaking at number five, and was named by Billboard magazine as the biggest country music record in history.

    The 19-week run of "Walk On By" is a record that stood for 51 years until "Cruise" by Florida Georgia Line reached its 19th week at No. 1 on July 20, 2013; the following week, "Cruise" surpassed the standard when it recorded its 20th week at No. 1. Until Florida Georgia Line surpassed it in total weeks at No. 1, "Walk On By" held the record for most weeks at No. 1 since the introduction of the all-encompassing Hot Country Songs (then called Hot C&W Sides) chart in October 1958; the all-time record for most weeks at No. 1 (21 weeks) is held jointly by three songs: "I'll Hold You In My Heart (Till I Can Hold You In My Arms)" by Eddy Arnold (1947); "I'm Movin' On" by Hank Snow (1950); and "In the Jailhouse Now" by Webb Pierce (1955).

    Walk On By (song)

    "Walk On By" is a song composed by Burt Bacharach, with lyrics by Hal David. The song was originally recorded by Dionne Warwick.

    Charting versions

    "Walk On By" has charted numerous times in various countries, with wildly different arrangements. The following entries discuss the chart versions of the song, in the order in which they appeared:

    Dionne Warwick version (1964)

    The original version of "Walk On By" was recorded at the same December 1963 session that yielded her hit "Anyone Who Had a Heart". "Walk On By" was the follow-up to that single, released in April 1964 and reaching #6 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 and #1 on the Cashbox's R&B chart. (Billboard did not print rhythm and blues charts during 1964, the year of the song's peak performance.) The song also reached the top 10 in a brief run on Billboard's easy listening survey. The song was ranked #70 on the Rolling Stone list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.

    Session drummer Gary Chester played on this recording. Other musicians included Artie Butler and Paul Griffin on piano, George Duvivier on bass, Irwin Markowitz and Ernie Royal on trumpet, Bill Suyker and Allen Hanlon on guitar, Max Pollikoff, Charles McCracken, Eugene Orloff and Julius Held and George Ockner on violin, Harold Coletta on viola, Lucien Schmit on cello, Paul Winter on sax, and George Devens on percussion.

    Sybil (album)

    Sybil (titled Walk On By in the UK) is the second studio album by American singer Sybil, released in 1989. Five singles were released off the album, "Can't Wait (On Tomorrow)", which had been released as a standalone single in 1988, and two cover versions of the Burt Bacharach and Hal David-written Dionne Warwick songs "Don't Make Me Over" and "Walk On By", which were both released as singles in 1989 and 1990 respectively. These two singles became Sybil's first real big hits worldwide, and were followed by "Crazy for You" (featuring Salt-N-Pepa) and a cover of Michael Jackson's "I Wanna Be Where You Are".

    The album itself became Sybil's biggest hit in North America, and the only one to enter the Billboard 200, and achieved its biggest sales in New Zealand, where "Don't Make Me Over" hit #1, and the album peaked at #3. "Don't Make Me Over" had been first released on Sybil's previous album Let Yourself Go, but had not been released as a single. The song "Love's Calling" was later included, in a new remix, on Sybil's 1993 album Doin' It Now!.

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