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The most commercially successful recording was by [[Kay Kyser]], whose version [[List of number-one singles of 1942 (U.S.)|reached no. 1]] in the ''[[Billboard (magazine)|Billboard]]'' charts in July 1942. Versions were recorded by many other musicians, including [[Tex Ritter]], [[Gene Autry]], [[Glenn Miller]], [[The Merry Macs]] and [[Burl Ives]].<ref name=ascap/>
The most commercially successful recording was by [[Kay Kyser]], whose version [[List of number-one singles of 1942 (U.S.)|reached no. 1]] in the ''[[Billboard (magazine)|Billboard]]'' charts in July 1942. Versions were recorded by many other musicians, including [[Tex Ritter]], [[Gene Autry]], [[Glenn Miller]], [[The Merry Macs]] and [[Burl Ives]].<ref name=ascap/>


The song is used in the 2010 [[role-playing video game]] ''[[Fallout: New Vegas]]''.<ref>[http://fallout.wikia.com/wiki/Jingle,_Jangle,_Jingle The Vault: Fallout wiki]</ref>
The song is used in the 2010 [[role-playing video game]] ''[[Fallout: New Vegas]]''.<ref>[http://www.falloutwiki.com/Jingle,_Jangle,_Jingle The Vault: Fallout wiki]</ref>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 04:28, 25 January 2012

Jingle Jangle Jingle is a song written by Joseph J. Lilley and Frank Loesser, and published in 1942.[1] It was featured in the film The Forest Rangers, in which it was sung by Dick Thomas.[2]

The most commercially successful recording was by Kay Kyser, whose version reached no. 1 in the Billboard charts in July 1942. Versions were recorded by many other musicians, including Tex Ritter, Gene Autry, Glenn Miller, The Merry Macs and Burl Ives.[1]

The song is used in the 2010 role-playing video game Fallout: New Vegas.[3]

References