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"Some Enchanted Evening" is a show tune from the 1949 Rodgers and Hammerstein musical South Pacific. It has been described as "the single biggest popular hit to come out of any Rodgers and Hammerstein show." [1] Andrew Lloyd Webber describes it as the "greatest song ever written for a musical". [2]
Some Enchanted Evening is the second live album by the American rock band Blue Öyster Cult, released on September 13, 1978. The album was certified for a million units sold in the United States. [1] The album's seven tracks were recorded at various locations in the United States and England.
Some Enchanted Evening is a popular song from the musical play South Pacific. Some Enchanted Evening may also refer to: Television "Some Enchanted Evening" (The ...
The song's lyrics are selected verses from a poem by Sandy Pearlman, the band's producer and mastermind behind their image, called "The Soft Doctrines of Imaginos".In the poem, which was later partially released under the BÖC moniker in the album Imaginos, aliens known as Les Invisibles guide an altered human named Imaginos, also called Desdinova, through history, playing key roles that ...
The following is the discography of the American rock band Blue Öyster Cult.. Blue Öyster Cult has released sixteen studio albums, the most recent one being released in 2024 entitled Ghost Stories.
The Castells version of "Some Enchanted Evening" from the musical South Pacific was used in Episode 1 of the Fallout TV series on Amazon Prime, during a slow-motion battle scene within Vault 33 between the Vault Dwellers and Raiders who had infiltrated the Vault whilst dressed as members of Vault 32.
Some Enchanted Evening is the tenth solo studio album by Art Garfunkel, released in 2007. It is Garfunkel's interpretation of many standards of the Great American Songbook. It was produced by long-time friend and producer Richard Perry.
Extraterrestrial Live is the third live album by American rock band Blue Öyster Cult, released in 1982 by Columbia Records.It primarily documents the band's 1981 tour in support of Fire of Unknown Origin, but also includes two tracks recorded in 1980 during the Mirrors Tour and the North American leg of Black Sabbath's Heaven & Hell Tour (dubbed The Black and Blue Tour).