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Ken Lane

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Kermit " Ken " Lane (December 20, 1912 – November 23, 1996) was an American musician from Brooklyn , New York . He was best known to audiences as Dean Martin 's pianist on The Dean Martin Show in the late 1960s and early 1970s, but was already well known in the film community before that.

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7-634: With Irving Taylor , Lane co-wrote " Everybody Loves Somebody " in 1947. Frank Sinatra recorded it first, followed by Dinah Washington and Peggy Lee before Martin himself recorded it in 1964 and took it to #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 list in August of that year. It would be Lane's biggest hit as a composer. He also arranged the music for Tars and Spars , Monsieur Beaucaire , California , Ladies' Man , Champagne For Two , Smooth Sailing , and Paris In The Spring in 1946 and 1947. Lane composed

14-553: A publishing company, Kiss Music Co., in the late 1950s. Also a member of ASCAP, "Kiss" was an anagram made from the first letters of Taylor's wife and children's first names. Kiss Music Co. now does business in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania , where Taylor's son Stephen resides. His daughter Suzanna died on January 5, 1995, in Wilmington, North Carolina , where her children continue to reside. Taylor died on December 3, 1983, at

21-912: A quartermaster on an LST involved in African and European invasions during World War II . He married Katharine Snell, an American dancer, model and actress, on 20 September 1942 and they had two children. He had changed his last name by 1936 from Goldberg to Taylor. He lived and worked in New York City until enlisting in the Navy. After the war ended, he began writing and producing for television ( The Carmen Cavallero Show , The Freddy Martin Show , and several situation comedies), and maintained homes in both New York City and Los Angeles , California , until finally settling in Los Angeles around 1956. In

28-692: The late 1950s, Taylor wrote words and music for a series of novelty albums which were released on the Warner Bros. label . The first was Terribly Sophisticated Songs, which parodied various genres of the popular music of the time, and featured "Pachalafaka," which was covered by Soupy Sales and broke into the Top 40 of the Billboard Hot 100 in 1958. The following year saw The Garbage Collector in Beverly Hills, which parodied work songs "for

35-596: The music for Lucy Gets Lucky , a 1975 made-for-TV movie starring Lucille Ball . Lane had two children: a daughter, Robin Lane , who is a rock singer, with her band "Robin Lane and the Chartbusters", and a son, Christopher "Kit" Robert Lane. Lane died of emphysema in 1996 in Lake Tahoe , California at the age of 83. Irving Taylor (songwriter) Irving Taylor (April 8, 1914 – December 3, 1983)

42-482: The odd job holder." This was followed by Drink Along With Irving, which parodied songs about alcohol such as " You Go To My Head " and " The Whiffenpoof Song ." In 1959, Warner Bros. released The Whimsical World of Irving Taylor, a compilation of the most popular of the numbers from the preceding albums. Many of the arrangements for all of the Warner Bros. albums were written by Henry Mancini . Taylor formed

49-686: Was an American composer, lyricist, and screenwriter. He was born Irving Goldberg in 1914 in Brooklyn , New York , United States. A member of ASCAP ( American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers ) since he was a teenager, he enlisted in the US Navy the day after the Attack on Pearl Harbor . While in uniform, he and Vic Mizzy wrote entertainments for personnel stationed at the Staten Island Navy Yard, and he later served as

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