It was Como's last number one hit in the United States,[3] reaching number 1 on the Billboard "Most Played by Jockeys" chart, but not in the overall top 100, where it reached number 3.[4] It was the first single to receive a Recording Industry Association of America gold record certification, on March 14, 1958.[5] In Canada, the song reached number 12 on the CHUM Charts, February 3, 1958, co-charting with Magic Moments.[6]

"Would You Catch a Falling Star" is a song written by Bobby Braddock, and recorded by American country music artist John Anderson. It was released in April 1982 as the second single from the album I Just Came Home to Count the Memories. The song reached number 6 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart.[1]


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The song opens telling about the performer, a one-time superstar, finishing a country music show, that had a small crowd. He then departs backstage, half drunk and meets a lady ("with all his country charm"), he says to her "Would you catch a falling star before he crashes to the ground." The song goes on to say that "nobody loves you when you're down". Stating that if she will pick him up and take him home, he will bring his old guitar, and sing a golden oldie song.

The next part of the song tells of his once wealth and fame, "He had a silver-plated bus, and a million country fans". The narrator states, now there's just a few of us and he drives a little van. He tells how the fans were beating down his door, lovely women left and right. Now he's down on his luck wondering where he will spend his night.

And then my daughter spotted it. The first shooting star. And there. Another one. A quick flash of light and sudden streak. And oh, look there, that one left a trail. We kept count and even though we were only on the deck for 30 minutes, we spied 20 falling stars (and a couple of jet planes too).

We talked about constellations and how we wished we knew more of them so we could identify them because the jet black expanse of nighttime was chock full of them. We spoke of how utterly amazing it was that God created the heavens and that He knew how many stars He placed in the sky. And we fell silent thinking that over.

We made a sweet memory to last a lifetime and shared an experience bound with love while we shivered on the deck catching falling stars. A memory to store away in the pockets of our minds to pull out later on those rainy days when life seems so difficult.

Christmas songs from the radio filled the silence as we drove along enveloped in darkness only broken by headlights of sparse oncoming traffic on the four-lane highway and the occasional red brake lights of vehicles far ahead of us.

Cloud cover even obscured the brightness of the moon and its supporting cast of shining stars. Suddenly, ahead of us a burst of brilliance filled the dark firmament then left a trail of luminescence downward toward the ground.

Back once more in our own reveries, I mulled over what I had just witnessed. Catch a falling star. Catch a falling star. Put it in your pocket, save it for a rainy day. The lyrics to that song kept playing in my mind drowning out the secular Christmas songs still coming from the car radio.

All of my kids have their own special night night song. My boys are long past the days of wanting me to sing to them now that they are teens, but my girls still love it and have trouble going to bed without it.

"Catch a Falling Star" is a song composed by Lee Pockriss and Paul Vance, and recorded in 1957 by Perry Como. It became the first R.I.A.A.-certified "Gold Record" in 1958 and won Perry Como the award for "Best Vocal Performance, Male" at the first annual Grammy Awards in 1959.

Every summer brings the Perseid meteor shower, which is generally considered to be the finest meteor shower of the year, renowned for displaying up to 100 "shooting stars" per hour. This year, it is predicted to peak Aug. 11-13, so mark your calendars now and gather a few simple supplies to prepare.

The simple way to catch, observe, and suddenly come into possession of a piece of a shooting star is to set out a plastic wash basin, partially filled with enough water to cover the bottom by about a half-inch, and leave it outside for three days and nights. The basin needs to be in an open, exposed area, so no roof or tree foliage interferes with the collecting of the micrometeorites.

Go and catch a falling star,

 Get with child a mandrake root,

Tell me where all past years are,

 Or who cleft the devil's foot,

Teach me to hear mermaids singing,

Or to keep off envy's stinging,

 And find

 What wind

Serves to advance an honest mind.

Falling Star (R3K Remix)Basic InformationArtists Featured in MashupDan BlackKid CudiFlorence + The MachineMashup ByR3KIn-Depth InformationRelease DateSeptember 29, 2011Community Genre(s)TrapRapSub-Genre(s)Chill TrapLength2:41Beats Per Minute (BPM)140KeyA minorStreaming Services SoundCloud YouTube Falling Star (R3K Remix) is a mashup by R3K of Dan Black's song Symphonies featuring Kid Cudi, and Florence + The Machine's song Cosmic Love. It was uploaded as a promotion on September 29, 2011, and removed from the label sometime after March 7, 2012.

Falling stars actually are meteors ----steaks of light from glowing atmospheric gases which are responding to the friction caused when particles rush toward the Earth at approximately 132,000 miles an hour. Some particles may be random rocks or space junk. But in the middle of August each year, we anticipate the Perseid Meteor Shower.

Actually, the hours just before dawn are probably the best time for meteor watching and August 12th and 13th are supposed to be the peak, but any clear dark night during the next week or so, you may catch a glimpse of a falling star, but I doubt if you will be able to put it in your pocket or save it for a rainy day.


The song "Falling Star" by Raphael Lake and Royal Baggs portrays the feeling of being lost and alone in the world. The song begins with the narrator dreaming of floating through the city streets, feeling free and peaceful. However, the narrator realizes that this dream cannot be sustained because their love interest is more like the "winter moon," bringing a coldness and separate energy to the relationship.

The chorus "Falling, falling, feel the weight of the world pulling down again" expresses the feeling of gravity bringing them back down to earth and the weight on the narrator's shoulders. They feel like a falling star that shoots through open skies, "passed before you even see," which may symbolize feelings of insignificance and lack of permanence. 006ab0faaa

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