Yes, though he was not the first to record the song Bobby Goldsboro did record a version of "little green apples". OC Smith's version is more famous.
The song "Little Green Apples" is often not available on karaoke platforms due to licensing restrictions and copyright issues. Many karaoke versions are created from specific recordings, and if the rights to those arrangements aren't secured, the song may not be offered. Additionally, the popularity and demand for certain songs can influence their availability, making some less common tracks harder to find.
Roger Miller recorded Little Green Apples.
green ( with a little blue in it, but it's mostly green.)
Bobby Russell (19 April 1940, Nashville, Tennessee - 19 November 1992) Russell wrote several hits, including "The Night the Lights Went Out in Georgia," his critique of country justice (a major hit for his then-wife Vicki Lawrence, to whom he was married from 1972 to 1974); "Used To Be" (from the movie The Grasshopper); and "Little Green Apples," which won him a Song of the Year Grammy Award in 1968 from the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences. He wrote the song "Honey", which was a hit for Bobby Goldsboro in 1968, spending five weeks at the top of the Billboard Pop Singles Chart. He also wrote and performed a major hit in 1971 about a suburban father nursing a hangover while his children raise Cain on a Saturday morning, appropriately called "Saturday Morning Confusion." Another of his songs, "1432 Franklin Pike Circle Hero," also explored the family life of an everyday man. Other songs that Russell recorded himself were "For a While We Helped Each Other Out" and "Our Love's Gonna Rise Up Again." He also wrote "Summer Sweet," for the Disney live-action, Rascal (1969). The B-side of "Summer Sweet" was "Better Homes and Gardens," foreshadowing the suburban theme of his later hits. Contrary to popular belief, he did not write "He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother." That song was co-written by another writer named Bob Russell. Russell died in 1992 in Nicholasville, Kentucky of coronary artery disease, aged 52.
It changes it's usually green black or yellow, and she HATES blue
The song "Little Green Apples" is often not available on karaoke platforms due to licensing restrictions and copyright issues. Many karaoke versions are created from specific recordings, and if the rights to those arrangements aren't secured, the song may not be offered. Additionally, the popularity and demand for certain songs can influence their availability, making some less common tracks harder to find.
Little Green Apples was created in 1968.
Roger Miller recorded Little Green Apples.
Clay Heart
Whether or not red apples or green apples are better, is really just a matter of personal taste. Green apples do tend to be a little more on the tart side depending on the variety.
Roger Miller released the recording of "Little Green Apples" in 1968. Recordings of "Little Green Apples" subsequently was released by many artists including Patti Page, O.C. Smith, Kelly Clarkson, Burl Ives, Frank Sinatra and Andy Williams. Tennessee Ernie Ford did not release a recording of "Tennessee Green Apples."
"God Didn't Make Little Green Apples" was famously performed by O.C. Smith in 1968. The song, written by Bobby Russell, became a hit for Smith, reaching number 27 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. It has since been covered by various artists, but Smith's rendition remains the most well-known.
As sure as God made little green apples.
a little sour. but really good 2 me!
=In my opinion, green apples taste better than red apples, not a lot or a little better, just better, but if you ask me, red apples are better for you than green apples, because green apples taste better than red apples. Would most people rather eat fried food or grilled food? Obvious answer, but grilled food is better for you than fried food.=
Little Green Apples is a song written by Bobby Russell which was most successful as a 1968 hit single by O.C. Smith. Roger Miller recorded the song and it went to #6 on the Top Ten Country & Western charts. Patti Page's version reached #11 on the Easy Listening charts in 1968. There were about 14 other people who recorded this song, but BJ Thomas just wasn't one of them.
Bobby Joe Green is 5' 11".