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    This article lists song titles that either are or contain telephone numbers within them. Since many such song titles include word mnemonics, each entry should include the full telephone number (in bold) that the song describes, followed by the actual title and artist. The list does not include songs which have been modified for the purposes of advertisements, for which lyrics including a telephone number are common.




        List of songs whose title includes a phone number
            Numbers
            Notes
            See also

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    Numbers
      PEnnsylvania 6-5000: (736-5000) by Glenn Miller (New York’s Hotel Pennsylvania, 401 Seventh Ave., 212/736-5000, www.hotelpenn.com still exists at this number)
      06-53931302: "Ringtone (06-53931302)" by Alain Clark
      1-800-Ghostdance by Hella
      254 13 26: "254.13.26" by the Spanish group Mecano
      272-5035: "272-5035" by Canadian Rock Band, Toronto
      493-1023: "493-1023" by Aslyn
      508-284-5816: "Part Time Mutha" by Tupac
      5705: "5.7.0.5" by City Boy
      606-0842: "6060-842" by the B-52's
      842-3089: "842-3089 (Call my Name)" by The Kinks
      650-3428: "Gurly's Cell Phone Number (650-3428)" by Darkbuster
      976: "976" by Eazy E in "radio"


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    Notes

      The old mnemonic system used in the early- to mid-20th century in the U.S. took the first two letters of a word and mapped them into two numbers. The notation used for the original "named exchanges" capitalised the first two letters as the only in the exchange name to actually be dialed; in the years leading up to direct long-distance dialing, numbers originally formatted in LIberty9-9999 format became LI9-9999 and then 549-9999 (for example) in preparation for the addition of a prepended area code. The length of numbers, often four or five digits in smaller communities, was also standardised in North America. For easy translation, here are the numbers for each letter (using the modern ITU E 1.161 system that has all the earlier letters in the same place, but adds the Q and Z that were omitted from old telephone dials):
        ABC: 2
        DEF: 3
        GHI: 4
        JKL: 5
        MNO: 6
        PQRS: 7
        TUV: 8
        WXYZ: 9
      The North American Numbering Plan reserves a portion of the exchange prefix 555- for use in fictitious telephone numbers, in an attempt to prevent the problems caused by the use of real numbers in films, television, or music. The 555- exchange originally contained the directory/information number 555-1212 and little else, allowing a block of fictitious numbers to be reserved across multiple area codes.
      Song titles from other countries may use different keypad mnemonics to spell out phone numbers. The number listed for each song should reflect the expected use.

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    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "List of songs whose title includes a phone number". link