Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Inside Out: Original Soundtrack is the soundtrack album to Disney/Pixar's 2015 film of the same name, composed by Michael Giacchino. It is the second collaboration between Michael Giacchino and Pete Docter , after previously working on Up , which received an Academy Award for Best Original Score .
In March 2024, it was reported that Andrea Datzman would compose Inside Out 2 's score. [1] Datzman previously composed the music for Pixar's short Carl's Date (2023) and co-scored the studio's animated shorts series Dug Days (2021) with Curtis Green. [2] Several of Giacchino's original themes from the first Inside Out are utilized in the score.
"Inside Out" was the first song written and recorded for the Traveling Wilburys' second album, [1] which they jokingly titled Vol. 3. [2] Reduced to a four-piece following the death of Roy Orbison in December 1988, the group gathered at a private house they dubbed "Camp Wilbury", [3] at the top of Coldwater Canyon in Bel Air, [4] in April 1990, for the writing and initial recording sessions. [5]
The song was covered by The Kidsongs Kids for the Kidsongs video A Day at Camp, released in 1989. [7] Sony Music included a Children's Chorus version on the 3-CD release Favorite Children's Songs in 2004. [8] A children's parody version of the song often uses lyrics such as "Hitler is a jerk, Mussolini is a weenie.
Inside Out is a 2015 American animated coming-of-age film produced by Pixar Animation Studios for Walt Disney Pictures. It was directed by Pete Docter from a screenplay he co-wrote with Meg LeFauve and Josh Cooley.
Inside Out is the ninth studio album by American country music artist Trisha Yearwood. It was released on June 5, 2001 via MCA Nashville and was produced by Mark Wright and Yearwood. Positively commented on by music critics, Inside Out became her first studio album to top the US Top Country Albums chart and her second overall after her ...
On Feb. 9, TikToker @noraeinhellll posted a video calling Pizza Hut to “hear the wing song again,” and it went viral, garnering more than 2.4 million views — and once you hear the song, you ...
Whilst the material of her album Connie Francis sings Fun Songs for Children (1959) clearly had aimed at toddlers and smaller children of pre-school age, Connie Francis and The Kids Next Door contained material suitable for older children and youths in their early teens by combining classic songs such as Do-Re-Mi from the musical The Sound of Music with modern novelty songs like a rendition of ...