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Ginalina's music videos have been aired on Universal Kids's "Get Up and Move", [12] Kidoodle.TV in Canada and the United States, [13] as well as on the Knowledge Network. [14] Books by Ginalina include The Mighty River (2020), the award-winning sequel, The Lively Forest (2021), [ 15 ] [ 16 ] and the final book in the trilogy, The Blooming ...
William Martin Joel (born May 9, 1949) is an American singer-songwriter, composer and pianist. Commonly nicknamed the "Piano Man", he has been making music since the 1960s ...
"Lullabye (Goodnight, My Angel)" is the seventh track from Billy Joel's 1993 album River of Dreams, released in 1994 as the fourth and final single for the album. It was inspired by Alexa Ray Joel, his daughter by Christie Brinkley. The song is in the key of G major.
It was past three o'clock on a Sunday with a crowd shuffling into Crypto.com Arena for the 2024 GRAMMY Awards when Billy Joel joked that one of his most iconic songs is driving him nuts, and The ...
"James" is a song written and performed by Billy Joel from his fourth studio album Turnstiles (1976). It was released as the album's first single in July 1976, backed with " Travelin' Prayer ". [ 2 ] One Final serenade described the song as "a wistful song about growing up and trying to balance pursuing one's dreams while balancing family and ...
Billy Joel and Alexa Ray Joel. Billy Joel is and will forever be known as The Piano Man.But when he's not tickling the ivories, he's focused on being a father. "I wait around for the kids to come ...
At the beginning of the video, Joel plays "Piano Man" on his harmonica.The entire video pays homage to the film It's a Wonderful Life, [2] as the angelic Joel shows a suicidal young man named George Young, (played by Jason Andrews) [6] threatening to jump off a bridge because of a break-up with his girlfriend what life will be like without him, as his family and friends mourn his death—as ...
The music video of the song features the full version, instead of the shortened one. A common motif in the video is the use of water, whether splashed on Joel's shoes, rushing out from school desks, or flooding his apartment. The video was directed by Russell Mulcahy and made its premiere on MTV on September 9, 1982.