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The Second Time Around" is a song with words by Sammy Cahn and music by Jimmy Van Heusen. It was introduced in the 1960 film High Time, sung by Bing Crosby with Henry Mancini conducting his orchestra, and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song. It lost out to "Never on Sunday". Its theme is captured by its first two lines:
Baker and Myers' most successful song as songwriters is "I Swear", recorded by both All 4-One and John Michael Montgomery. The song sold more than 20 million copies internationally, [2] and won the 1995 Grammy for "Best Country Song". [3] In 1995, he and Myers recorded one album on Curb Records as the duo Baker & Myers.
All-4-One and John Michael Montgomery recorded an updated duet version of "I Swear" for the deluxe edition of All-4-One's 2015 album Twenty+. A music video for this duet version was released on May 9, 2016. In 2021, All-4-One recorded a remix of "I Swear" for a music video promoting Xbox All-Access, titled "It's All There". [20]
"Second Time Around", by Yo-Yo Ma, Mark O'Connor, and Edgar Meyer from Appalachian Journey, 2000 "Second Time Around", the theme song of the sitcom Step by Step , 1991 Topics referred to by the same term
Michael Jackson in 1984. American singer-songwriter Michael Jackson recorded songs for ten studio albums, two posthumous studio albums, seventy two compilation albums, three soundtrack albums, one live album and seven remix albums. He has provided background vocals for songs recorded by other artists, as well as featured on duets.
Baker & Myers was an American country music duo composed of singer-songwriters Gary Baker and Frank J. Myers, who first worked as songwriters for other country music artists; one of their most notable compositions is John Michael Montgomery's 1994 crossover hit "I Swear", which won the Grammy Award for Best Country song a year later; this song was later recorded by pop group All-4-One as well.
"Don't Get Around Much Anymore" is a jazz standard written by composer Duke Ellington. [1] The song was originally entitled "Never No Lament" and was first recorded by Duke Ellington and his orchestra on May 4, 1940. [2] "Don't Get Around Much Anymore" quickly became a hit after Bob Russell wrote its lyrics in 1942. [3]
The Heart Never Forgets, Baker/Myers/Williams - LeAnn Rimes; The House Won’t Rock, Myers/Miller - Sawyer Brown; The Moment – Hal Ketchum; The Road to You (1998), Tritt/Baker/Myers - Travis Tritt; The Song I Said I’d Never Write For You - Eddy Raven; The Trill - Kate Bradshaw; These Arms - Baker & Myers, All-4-One; Think About That ...