Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Mansions" was originally written for the 2002 film We Were Soldiers, and was performed by the United States Military Academy Glee Club and the Metro Voices. The hymn also served as the recessional in the 2004 funeral of President Ronald Reagan. That rendition was sung by the Armed Forces Chorus with the United States Marine Chamber Orchestra.
"Victory" is an old fight song of the Pennsylvania State University.It is most often sung by the Penn State Glee Club and performed by the Penn State Blue Band.. While a Penn State student and Glee Club member in 1913, James Leyden began singing a song he had just created at the athletic Track House.
Glee is an American musical comedy-drama television series produced by Fox. It focuses on the glee club New Directions, at the fictional William McKinley High School in Lima, Ohio. [1] The show was created by Ryan Murphy, Brad Falchuk and Ian Brennan, and features many cover versions of songs sung on-screen by the characters. [2]
Pretending" is an original song from the second season of the American musical comedy-drama Glee, entitled "New York". The episode included two other original songs: "As Long as You're There" and "Light Up the World". The song was featured on the show's Volume 6 soundtrack. The song was written by Adam Anders, Peer Astrom and Shelly Peiken. [1]
“I remember when that came on — on Glee,” Shears, 46, said. “I threw a party at my house, and we all sat there, and Sarah Jessica Parker doing the intro for the song, I think, was one of ...
It was recorded by cast member Lea Michele as her character, Rachel Berry, and is credited collectively to the Glee cast. "This Time" and the other songs performed in the episode were included on an extended play titled Glee: The Music, Dreams Come True, which was released on March 17, 2015, three days before the episode aired. [2]
Onetime "Glee" co-stars Lea Michele and Darren Criss are caught on TikTok singing "Don't Stop Believin'" all over again.
Lyrics from Hark the Sound, UNC-Chapel Hill Alma Mater, ca. 1908. "Hark the Sound" is the alma mater (song) of the University of North Carolina.It was written by William Starr Myers (class of 1897), a member of the UNC Glee Club at the time.