<Li> "Yes, We Have No Bananas" (Frank Silver & Irving Cohn, 1923) </Li> <Li> "You Gotta Be a Football Hero" (Al Sherman, Buddy Fields & Al Lewis, 1933) </Li> <Ul> <Li> In the 1959--1960 television season, NBC aired a sitcom Love and Marriage, based on the fictitious William Harris Music Publishing Company set in Tin Pan Alley . William Demarest, Stubby Kaye, Jeanne Bal, and Murray Hamilton co-starred in the series, which aired 18 episodes . </Li> <Li> In the song "Bob Dylan's Blues" from Bob Dylan's 1963 album The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan, he introduces the song, saying, "Unlike most of the songs nowadays that have been written up town in Tin Pan Alley, that's where most of the folk songs come from nowadays, this, this is a song, this wasn't written up there, this was written down somewhere in the United States ." </Li> <Li> In the song "Bitter Fingers" from the 1975 autobiographical "concept album" Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy, Elton John refers to himself and his longtime song - writing partner, lyricist Bernie Taupin, as the "Tin Pan Alley Twins". </Li> <Li> Neil Diamond's liner notes ("...tin pan alley died hard, but there was always the music to keep you going ...") indicate that the album Beautiful Noise (1976) was intended as a tribute to his days there . </Li> <Li> Tin Pan Alley is mentioned in the song It Never Rains (1982) by Dire Straits </Li> <Li> The Bob Geddins blues song "Tin Pan Alley (aka The Roughest Place in Town)", recorded by Jimmy Wilson, was a top 10 hit on the R&B chart in 1953 and became a popular song among West Coast blues performers . The song was also covered by Stevie Ray Vaughan </Li> <Li> The song "Tin Pan Alley" by The Apples in Stereo . </Li> <Li> Tin Pan Alley of the 1960s was discussed by Robbie Robertson of The Band in the Martin Scorsese film of The Band's final concert in 1976, The Last Waltz . </Li> <Li> The song "Who Are You" by The Who has the stanza "I stretched back and I hiccupped / And looked back on my busy day / Eleven hours in the Tin Pan / God, there's got to be another way", which references a long legal meeting with music publisher Allen Klein . </Li> </Ul> <Li> In the 1959--1960 television season, NBC aired a sitcom Love and Marriage, based on the fictitious William Harris Music Publishing Company set in Tin Pan Alley . William Demarest, Stubby Kaye, Jeanne Bal, and Murray Hamilton co-starred in the series, which aired 18 episodes . </Li>

Who was not associated with tin pan alley