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Peter Joseph Salett (born May 12, 1969) is an American singer-songwriter. He is best known as a musician for his song "Heart of Mine" in the movie Keeping the Faith, his song score for the 2006 film Down in the Valley, and for co-writing the Dracula puppet musical finale, "A Taste for Love", in the Judd Apatow produced film, Forgetting Sarah Marshall.
"Heart of Mine" is a 2000 song written and sung by composer-lyricist Peter Salett. Its album was sent to Edward Norton in 2000 when he was making his directorial debut in Keeping the Faith, and the title song ended up being used as the theme for the film. [1] [2]
"Heart of Mine" (Peter Salett song) Heart of Mine, a 2000 album by Peter Salett "Heart of Mine" (Bob Dylan song) "Heart of Mine", a song by Boz Scaggs from Other Roads "Heart of Mine," a song by The Young Veins from Take a Vacation!
The song describes a calm, reflective astronaut known as Major Tom who is detached from the psychological stress of his colleagues and spends a significant amount of time engaging in certain scientific experiments about which he feels uncertain.
"San Jacinto" is a song written and performed by the English rock musician Peter Gabriel. Released in 1982, it is the second track off his fourth self-titled album . Excerpts of the song’s coda were repurposed for "Powerhouse at the Foot of the Mountain" on Gabriel's 1985 Birdy soundtrack album.
"Light One Candle," written in 1982 by Peter Yarrow and first performed at Carnegie Hall, [1] [2] was a pacifist response to the 1982 Lebanon War as reflected in the lyrics: "Light one candle for the terrible sacrifice justice and freedom demand, "Light one candle for the wisdom to know when the peacemaker's time is at hand." [3] [1]
Co-written by Peter Wood, "Year of the Cat" is a narrative song written in the second person whose protagonist, a tourist, is visiting an exotic market when a mysterious silk-clad woman appears and takes him away for a gauzy romantic adventure. On waking the next day beside her, the tourist notes that his tour bus has left without him, and ...
In the late 1970s or early 1980s, Peter Jones discovered a collection of century-old letters in his parents' attic in Bethesda, Maryland. [1] [2] The letters had been sent by his great-great-great grandfather, Byran Hunt, to his son, Jones' great-great grandfather, John Hunt, [a] who had emigrated from Kilkelly, County Mayo, to the United States in 1855 and worked on the railroad.