The original cover art was designed by Hugh Syme and was originally intended to be the cover art for Max Webster's High Class in Borrowed Shoes.
Trouble Over Bridgwater | Trouble Along the Way | Hey Good Lookin' | Trouble from the Start | The Trouble with Harry | Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen | Keef Trouble | Bad Boy Trouble | Trouble Walkin' | Trouble Or Nothin' | Trouble at the Top | The Trouble with Success or How You Fit into the World | Monkey Trouble | Lookin' for Love | Little Brother, Big Trouble: A Christmas Adventure | Just Lookin' 1990–1997 | Hey Good Lookin' (film) | Goldie Lookin' Chain | Dual! Parallel Trouble Adventure | Big Trouble in Little China | A Footnote to History: Eight Years of Trouble in Samoa | 40 Pounds of Trouble | Trouble with the Curve | Trouble Will Find Me | Trouble Time | Trouble (Ray LaMontagne album) | Trouble Is... | Trouble in the Hood | Trouble in the Glen | Trouble Funk |
All the Wrong Places is the byline to the song Lookin' for Love (in all the wrong places) released in 1980 as part of the soundtrack to the John Travolta and Debra Winger film Urban Cowboy.
Jolie made her screen debut as a child alongside her father, Jon Voight, in Lookin' to Get Out (1982), but her film career began in earnest a decade later with the low-budget production Cyborg 2 (1993).
The cover of "Hey Good Lookin'" was recorded at a club performance in Madison, Wisconsin.
Lookin At Lucky was retired to Coolmore's Ashford Stud near Versailles, Kentucky shortly after his run in the Breeders Cup.
The single was released in August 1977 after the band had performed a five date tour supporting Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers.
The song was co-written by the trio's three members (Hillary Scott, Charles Kelley, and Dave Haywood) along with Keith Follesé, and it features lead vocals from both Scott and Kelley.
The Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode "Looking for par'Mach in All the Wrong Places" is titled in tribute to this song ("par'Mach" is defined in the episode as "the Klingon word for love, but with more aggressive overtones").
Fogerty has also said that the reference to a parade passing by was inspired by the Dr. Seuss book, And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street.
#"E-Ne-Me-Ne-Mi-Ne-Moe (The Choice is Yours to Pull)" (Johnny Bristol, Wade Bowen, D. Jones) (recorded October 1971–April 1972)
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The bonus tracks were "Love Song", the B-side of this album's title track single, and a live performance of "Who's Lovin' You", which first appeared on the soundtrack of the 1992 TV movie The Jacksons: An American Dream.
Country music star Johnny Lee, best known for his 1980 hit "Lookin' for Love," was raised on a dairy farm in Santa Fe (then part of the unincorporated town of Alta Loma) and graduated from Santa Fe High School in 1964.
Along with Mase's "Lookin' at Me", the single was one of the first high profile productions done by Virginia production team The Neptunes.
Sure Lookin' is a pop song performed by Donny Osmond, a track from "The Best of Donny Osmond" released in May 1994.
Whatcha Lookin' 4 is the third album released by Kirk Franklin.