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That year, "Easy on Me" also received the Gaffa Award for Foreign Song of the Year, [66] the Juno Award for Video of the Year, [67] and the New Music Award for Top 40/CHR Song of the Year. [68] At the 65th Annual Grammy Awards in 2023, the song won Best Pop Solo Performance and was nominated for Record of the Year , Song of the Year , and Best ...
"I'm Easy" is an Academy Award-winning song written and performed by Keith Carradine for the 1975 movie Nashville. [1] Carradine recorded a slightly faster version that became a popular music hit in 1976 in the United States .
This is a partial list of songs that originated in movies that charted (Top 40) in either the United States or the United Kingdom, though frequently the version that charted is not the one found in the film. Songs are all sourced from, [1] [2] and,. [3] For information concerning music from James Bond films see
Chicago-based Vee-Jay Records head A&R man, Calvin Carter, brought back "Make It Easy on Yourself" from a trip to New York City where he scouted song publishers.Carter played the demo, featuring Dionne Warwick's vocal, for Vee-Jay artist Jerry Butler who commented: "Man, it's a great song, and the girl who's singing it, and the arrangement, is a hit."
Elvis Presley recorded the song for the film Easy Come, Easy Go on September 29, 1966, at Paramount Studio Recording Stage in Hollywood. The recording sessions featured Scotty Moore and Tiny Timbrell on guitar, Charlie McCoy on harmonica, organ and guitar, Bob Moore on bass, D.J. Fontana, Buddy Harman, Hal Blaine, Curry Tjader and Larry Bunker on drums, Emil Radocchia on percussion, Michel ...
Maude ("And Then There's Maude") – lyrics by Alan and Marilyn Bergman by Dave Grusin; sung by Donny Hathaway; Maverick – David Buttolph and Paul Francis Webster; Max Headroom – Michael Hoenig; Max Monroe: Loose Cannon ("Tied Up") – Yello; May to December ("September Song") – Kurt Weill and Maxwell Anderson, adapted by Mark Warman
"Easy" is a song by American band Commodores from their fifth studio album, Commodores (1977), released on the Motown label. Group member Lionel Richie wrote "Easy" with the intention of it becoming another crossover hit for the group given the success of a previous single, "Just to Be Close to You", which spent two weeks at number one on the US Billboard Hot Soul Singles chart (now known as ...
Its first release was on the soundtrack EP "Easy Come, Easy Go" in spring 1967. [2] [3] The Australian Kent Music Report (calculated in retrospect using archival data) lists the song / the EP "Easy Come, Easy Go" on the singles chart for 5 weeks, with the peak of 78 on the week of May 13, 1967. [4]