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  1. Apr 30, 2014 · Pictured (above) Bert Berns with “Hang On Sloopy” co-writer Wes Farrell. The powerful yet largely untold story of the BMI songwriter behind classic hits such as “Twist & Shout,” “I Want Candy,” “Hang On Sloopy,” “Piece of My Heart,” and dozens of other songs is finally coming to light in a new three-part multimedia effort ...

  2. open.spotify.com › artist › 6qboIjya5v6wTBulM6OmO5Wes Farrell | Spotify

    Listen to Wes Farrell on Spotify. Artist · 1.6K monthly listeners.

  3. Was Wes Farrell married? He was married to Jean Alice Inman from August 28, 1981 to February 29, 1996, Pamela Hensley from November 23, 1978 to August 15, 1980, Tina Sinatra from January 26, 1974 to September 3, 1976, and Joan Ellen Arthurs from February 9, 1966 to 1972.

  4. Full music credits for Wes Farrell: 331 performances. Roles performed: songwriter, producer, writer, arranger, composer. Releases include: Living in a World of Make Believe / I Played My Part Well (Good & Plenty), The Partridge Family Album (The Partridge Family), The Partridge Family Shopping Bag.

  5. "Come On Down to My Boat" is a song written by Jerry Goldstein and Wes Farrell and performed by Every Mother's Son. Their only top 40 hit ever, it reached No. 6 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1967, [1] and appeared on their self-titled debut album ; on the album the track was titled " Come and Take a Ride in My Boat ". [2]

  6. Cherish was designed as a project by Partridge Family musical producer Wes Farrell to break Cassidy out as a solo star via material not directly connected to the TV series. The album was recorded during the second half of 1971 with essentially the same musicians and technicians who had worked on earlier Partridge Family recordings, but with the ...

  7. Added: Feb 9, 2019. Find a Grave Memorial ID: 196733991. Source citation. Collage artist. Daughter of Wes Farrell and Jean Inman. Farrell was born to Jean Farrell and the late Wes Farrell, a popular songwriter in the 1960s and ‘70s whose co-writing credits included The McCoys’ 1965 chart-topper Hang On Sloopy, Boys, a B-side the Beatles had ...

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