Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
There were so many songs called 'Saturday Night', even one by the Bay City Rollers, so when we rewrote it for the movie, we called it 'Stayin' Alive'. [ 10 ] The track was recorded at Criteria Studios, with Maurice Gibb playing a bass line similar to the guitar riff, Barry Gibb and Alan Kendall on guitar riffs, and Blue Weaver on synthesizers.
Pages in category "Songs from Saturday Night Fever" The following 12 pages are in this category, out of 12 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B.
Saturday Night Fever is a 1977 American dance drama film directed by John Badham and produced by Robert Stigwood.It stars John Travolta as Tony Manero, a young Italian-American man who spends his weekends dancing and drinking at a local discothèque while dealing with social tensions and disillusionment in his working class ethnic neighborhood in Brooklyn.
Saturday Night Fever "Night Fever" Bee Gees Barry Gibb, Robin Gibb and Maurice Gibb: 1 1 February 25 Thank God It's Friday "Thank God It's Friday" Love & Kisses: Alec R. Costandinos: 22 February 25 Saturday Night Fever "If I Can't Have You" Yvonne Elliman: Barry Gibb, Robin Gibb and Maurice Gibb: 1 4 March 25 "Boogie Shoes" KC and the Sunshine Band
Donna Pescow is looking back on her star-making turn in Saturday Night Fever, the iconic 1977 film that also helped catapult John Travolta to the A-List. “I was overwhelmed, I think, a lot of ...
Forty five years ago, John Travolta strutted down a Brooklyn sidewalk — and into movie history — in the iconic opening sequence of Saturday Night Fever. Premiering in theaters on Dec. 16, 1977 ...
The song was released in December 1977 by RSO Records as the second single from the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack. The band wrote the song and co-produced it with Albhy Galuten and Karl Richardson. It is one of the Bee Gees' signature songs. In 2004, "Stayin' Alive" was placed at No. 189 by Rolling Stone on their list of the 500 Greatest ...
It's true: December 2017 will mark 40 years since "Saturday Night Fever" first premiered. And while the tabloids still love John Travolta, we haven't seen quite as much of Karen Lynn Gorney!