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Do Re Mi is a musical with music by Jule Styne, lyrics by Betty Comden and Adolph Green, and a book by Garson Kanin, who also directed the original 1960 Broadway production. . The plot centers on a minor-league con man who decides to go (somewhat) straight by moving into the legitimate business of juke boxes and music promoti
"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.
Do-Re-Mi is a 1961 jazz album by June Christy and Bob Cooper, consisting of selections from the Broadway musical Do Re Mi, written by Jule Styne, Betty Comden and Adolf Green. Half the tunes are sung by Christy, backed by Cooper and an instrumental group, the other half played by Cooper leading an instrumental group with mostly different personnel.
Do Re Mi, a Malaysian comedy film, and two sequels; Do Re Mi, a Filipino musical comedy film; Do Re Mi Fa So La Ti Do, a 2008 South Korean film; Do-Re-Mi, a Czech amateur singer contest TV show; Do, Re & Mi, an animated musical children's TV series
"Do Re Mi" (stylized in all lowercase) is a song written and performed by American hip-hop recording artist Blackbear. The original version was released on March 17, 2017, as the lead single from his third studio album, Digital Druglord (2017). The original version peaked at number 40 on the Billboard Hot 100. [1]
A music video to accompany the release of "Freefall" was first premiered on van Buuren's YouTube on 11 June 2016. [2] To film the music video, Armin van Buuren and the Armada Music and Cloud 9 Music staffs from Amsterdam decided to take a helicopter and to drop from the gate to feel a real experience of "Freefall" over North Holland.
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.
Dan Weiss of Spin described "Do Re Mi" as Cobain's "best posthumously released song—take that 'You Know You're Right. ' " [3] Collin Brennan of Consequence of Sound called it "the finest Cobain composition that never saw the light of day during his lifetime" and wrote, "If Paul McCartney was born a few decades later and opted for dirty flannel instead of a moptop, this is the kind of tune he ...