#"Something Else" (Eddie Cochran, Sharon Sheeley) – 2:12
Parnes also promoted concerts, including the 1960 tour by Gene Vincent and Eddie Cochran during which Cochran was killed in a road crash.
A CD single called 'C'mon Everybody Note&Pencils' was released by Pony Canyon in 2006-08-09, which included Eddie Cochran's C'mon Everybody (original, DJ UTO remix, instrumental) used in the Nissan Note commercial premiered on 2006-05-12.
Eddie Murphy | Eddie Cantor | Eddie Van Halen | Eddie Izzard | Eddie Rickenbacker | Eddie Money | Eddie | Eddie Gomez | Eddie Albert | Eddie Cochran | Eddie Rabbitt | Eddie Henderson | Eddie Garcia | Eddie Harris | Eddie Campbell | Eddie Bauer | The Courtship of Eddie's Father | Eddie Rambeau | Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis | Eddie Kendricks | Eddie the Head | Eddie's Attic | Eddie Murray | Eddie Levert | Eddie Floyd | Eddie Condon | Malcolm & Eddie | Jacqueline Cochran | Eddie Palmieri | Eddie Holland |
#"C'mon Everybody"/"Something Else" (Cochran, Capehart, Sheeley, Cochran) (on 6 November)
In 2001, Paul released a personal compilation titled Forever Young, which included the title song by Alphaville (which Paul sang for the 2000 Belgian movie Team Spirit) as well as pieces by Eddie Cochran, Jacques Dutronc, Donovan, Dionne Warwick, The Wallace Collection, Easybeats, Eddie Floyd, and other artists from Europe and North America.
After recordings were finished they stayed at the studio and Lemmy picked up an acoustic guitar and started playing some of his old favorite songs by Johnny Cash, Buddy Holly and Eddie Cochran.
The album features covers of songs by artists including Amy Winehouse, Kitty Wells, Eddie Cochran, Johnny Cash, Johnny Kidd & The Pirates and Bob Dylan.
A commercial and critical success, Vincebus Eruptum peaked at number 11 on the Billboard 200 albums chart and spawned the top-20 hit cover of Eddie Cochran's "Summertime Blues".
An upbeat hard rock cover of Eddie Cochran's rockabilly "Twenty Flight Rock" follows, serving as an echo of its stylistic companion Good Rockin' Tonight which appeared on the 1973 Montrose debut.