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"Ai Se Eu Te Pego" (Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈaj sj ˈew tʃi ˈpɛɡu]; transl. Oh, If I Catch You) is a 2008 song by Sharon Acioly and Antônio Dyggs, with co-authorship by Aline da Fonseca, Amanda Teixeira and Karine Assis Vinagre [1] and first performed by Os Meninos de Seu Zeh, directed by Dyggs himself.
"Do-Re-Mi" is a show tune from the 1959 Rodgers and Hammerstein musical The Sound of Music. Each syllable of the musical solfège system appears in the song's lyrics, sung on the pitch it names. Rodgers was helped in its creation by long-time arranger Trude Rittmann who devised the extended vocal sequence in the song.
"Catch Me" is a song written by Sid Tepper and Roy C. Bennett and was first recorded in 1960 by American teenage singer Jeri Lynne Fraser and released as the B-side of her single "Poor Begonia (Caught Pneumonia)" in August 1960.
"Don't Forget to Catch Me" was written by the Shadows' Hank Marvin, Bruce Welch and Brian Bennett and it became Richard's final single to feature the group until the 2009 cover of "Singing the Blues". The B-side "What's More (I Don't Need Her)" was written by Guy Fletcher and Doug Flett and wasn't sung with the Shadows.
The message of the song parallels a theme of John Steinbeck's seminal novel The Grapes of Wrath, wherein the Joad family makes a dangerous, expensive trip from their home in Oklahoma to California. They encounter a fellow Dust Bowl migrant at a roadside rest-stop who tells them to turn back, echoing the cautionary tone of the song.
I don't think the interntion was to say the melody of the song was limited to the eight notes of the diatonic scale, just that the syllables that are taught to the children in the song lyrics--do, re, mi, fa(r), so(l), la, ti and do (again)--comprise the notes of the diatonic scale and can be played on simple instruments.
It was released in February 1983 as the first single and title track from the album If Gonna Do Me Wrong (Do It Right). The song reached #5 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart. [1] Gosdin wrote the song with Max D. Barnes. The song entered the charts at the same week as Gosdin's last single for AMI Records, "Friday Night Feelin'".
"Catch Me" was used as the opening theme of the Fuji TV drama series Ohima nara Kite yo Ne! (おヒマなら来てよネ!, If You're Free, Come On!), which starred Nakayama. [8] "Catch Me" became Nakayama's first No. 1 on Oricon's weekly singles chart and sold over 218,000 copies. [9] [10]