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"Beyond the Sunset" is a song written by Blanche Kerr Brock, Virgil P. Brock, and Albert Kennedy Rowswell. [1] It was released as a single by Hank Williams under the ...
Rambo wrote over 2500 songs throughout her lifetime, and many have been recorded by hundreds of artists. [ 1 ] Songs are listed in alphabetical order and followed in parentheses by other notable artists who have recorded or performed the song.
Beyond the Sunset may refer to: Beyond the Sunset, a 1989 Hong Kong film "Beyond the Sunset" (song), a 1950 song by Hank Williams; Beyond the Sunset: The Romantic ...
The song begins and ends in 9/8 time, while the majority of the song is in 4/4 (or "common time"), and it is punctuated with added measures of 7/8 and 3/8. Adding to the complexity, the main theme of the rhythm guitar has chords changing emphatically in dotted eighth notes, so three eighth-note beats are divided equally in two.
Pet Sounds is the eleventh studio album by the American rock band the Beach Boys, released on May 16, 1966, by Capitol Records.It was initially met with a lukewarm critical response in the United States, although it peaked at number 10 on the Billboard Top LPs chart.
Powers' first song for film was the title track for the Oscar-Winning When We Were Kings (1996). [11] She has also written songs for the films Sweet Home Alabama, Ella Enchanted and Aquamarine [12] as well as television shows including Guiding Light, All My Children, Laguna Beach, Castle and America's Next Top Model.
Beethoven as portrayed by August von Kloeber in 1818. In 1820, when Beethoven wrote Abendlied he was 49 years old. 1820 was a year in which the sorrows of his life (deafness, illness, failure to find a marriage partner) [a] were augmented by the climactic phase of his legal confrontation with his sister-in-law Johanna van Beethoven over custody of his nephew (Johanna's son) Karl.
"Canadian Sunset" is a popular song with music by jazz pianist Eddie Heywood and lyrics by Norman Gimbel. An instrumental version by Heywood and Hugo Winterhalter reached No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and No. 7 on the R&B chart in 1956. [1] A version sung by Andy Williams was also popular that year, reaching No. 7 on the Billboard chart. [2]