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It then heads south to remember the amazing career of Ruby Murray.
The most popular version of the song was recorded by Ruby Murray in 1955.
Still, nothing a good Ruby Murray and a few pints couldnae put right.
He would not be born for another three years when Ruby Murray set the record he now looks set to break.
It was covered in Britain by Ruby Murray.
(Artists to have played there include Ruby Murray and The Drifters).
At the same time, the group also backed singer Ruby Murray during a 13-week series for Radio Luxembourg.
Burnett played a reporter called Ruby Murray in the award-winning film Cash and Curry.
The Ruby Murray's oan you!
Afton later replaced Regan with Ruby Murray.
During this time, he wrote the song Softly Softly, a British number one hit for Ruby Murray.
Popular singer Ruby Murray was born in Moltke Street, just off the Donegall Road.
Northern Ireland has produced many musical legends - from Van Morrison and The Undertones - to Ruby Murray!
He performed a duet with Ruby Murray on the soundtrack of the 1959 film, Darby O'Gill and the Little People.
The name "Ruby Murray" lives on in rhyming slang, quite often in Only Fools And Horses, as the rhyme for "curry".
The same year, United Kingdom singer Ruby Murray recorded a version on UK Columbia, catalog number DB 3994.
"Forty Shades of Green" has also been recorded by Daniel O'Donnell, Foster and Allen, and Ruby Murray, among others.
Ruby Murray's long-standing record has withstood surges in sales following the deaths of iconic figures such as Elvis Presley, John Lennon and Freddie Mercury.
From Dana to Stiff Little Fingers, Ruby Murray to Therapy? - Northern Ireland's music industry is being featured in a new exhibition in Belfast.
In 1960 he was invited by orchestra leader, Norrie Paramor and their mutual friends Ruby Murray and Michael Holliday to record an extended-play single with four tracks.
The song was successfully revived in the 1950s in the US by the Fontane Sisters and in the UK most successfully by Ruby Murray.
First recorded by Piaf, it was later popularized by Patti Page in the United States and by Ruby Murray in the United Kingdom.
A Touch of the Sun is a 1956 British comedy film directed by Gordon Parry and starring Frankie Howerd, Ruby Murray and Dennis Price.
Although he originally hoped to train as a vet, in the 1950s Phil became a publicist for Ruby Murray, the first Northern Irish entertainer to top the UK hit parade.
Lecturers and speakers included Ruby Murray, Andrew Foran, Christian Monahan, Susannah Powell, Catherine Johnston and Jodi Newcombe.