Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
UK 1 – Apr 1978, US BB 1 – Feb 1978, US CashBox 1 of 1978, Canada 1 – Feb 1978, France 1 – Apr 1978, Republic of Ireland 1 – Apr 1978, Norway 2 – May 1978, Germany 2 – May 1978, Netherlands 3 – Apr 1978, Switzerland 3 – May 1978, Austria 4 – Jun 1978, Sweden (alt) 5 – May 1978, US BB 10 of 1978, POP 11 of 1978, South ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
The soundtrack was released on April 14, 1978, two months ahead of the film's release. [1] As with most musicals of the period, the vocal takes recorded for the album release–and in some cases the instrumental background as well–do not lock to picture but were recorded during entirely different soundtrack sessions often months prior or subsequent to the performances used for lip sync in ...
Make Mine Music (animated) Mantan Messes Up; Monsieur Beaucaire; Murder in the Music Hall; Night and Day; No Leave, No Love; The Road to Hollywood; Road to Utopia; Sing While You Dance; Singin' in the Corn; Slightly Scandalous; Song of the South; Susie Steps Out; Sweetheart of Sigma Chi; Swing Parade of 1946; Talk About a Lady; Tars and Spars ...
Halloween is a soundtrack album composed and performed by John Carpenter, featuring the score to the 1978 film Halloween.It was released in Japan in 1979 by Columbia Records and in the United States in 1983 through Varèse Sarabande.
These are the Billboard magazine number-one albums of 1978, per the Billboard 200. The Bee Gees' Saturday Night Fever soundtrack was the best-selling album of 1978, and spent 24 consecutive weeks at number one.
The Buddy Holly Story is a 1978 American biographical musical drama film directed by Steve Rash which tells the life and career of rock and roll musician Buddy Holly.It features an Academy Award-winning musical score, adapted by Joe Renzetti and Oscar-nominated lead performance by Gary Busey.
Grease is a 1978 American musical romantic comedy film directed by Randal Kleiser (in his feature directorial debut) from a screenplay by Bronté Woodard and an adaptation by co-producer Allan Carr, based on the 1972 stage musical of the same name by Jim Jacobs and Warren Casey. [3]