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" Yma o Hyd" (English: "Still Here") is a Welsh-language folk song by Dafydd Iwan. The song was released during Iwan and Ar Log's "Taith Macsen" ("Macsen's Journey") tour in 1983. Since then it has continued to gain popularity at cultural and sporting events.
This song had been written as a throwaway song for a minor character, but Yvonne De Carlo was a high-profile name in the cast, and the creative team felt she deserved a more substantial song. The librettist James Goldman suggested it should be a song about survival that said 'I'm still here.' Sondheim borrowed the phrase for the song title. [2]
"I'm Still Here" is an "inspirational", [22] midtempo ballad which features Sia's "powerful" vocals. [15] Lyrically, it is about perseverance and Sia's battles with the past. [13] [15] At a length of 4 minutes and 1 second, [23] the song was written by Sia and frequent collaborator Jesse Shatkin in the key of A major, [24] and produced solely by Shatkin. [25]
"I'm Still Here (Jim's Theme)" is a song written by the Goo Goo Dolls frontman John Rzeznik for the Disney film Treasure Planet. The song was released by Rzeznik as a solo track, which is autobiographical, loosely inspired by Rzeznik’s own life growing up in Buffalo, New York. It was a moderately successful pop hit.
Their first million-dollar seller was a song produced by Syl Johnson entitled "I'm Still Here." The follow-up single to that was a song entitled "At The Crossroads," written by group member James Stroud. The original members were Clifford Curry, Lasalle Matthews, and James Stroud. The group stayed with Twilight Records until the company closed.
"I'm Still Here" was written by Esther Nabaasa and produced by Michael Fingerz. Produced at Masters Music. The song was released on Juliana’s official Youtube channel on March 30, 2017. The song basically celebrates a strong woman, who however much and longer they are weighed down by hardships, they still get up and move on. [1]
"Still" is a 1979 song by the soul music group the Commodores. It was released as a single on Motown Records with "Such a Woman" as the B-side. The song appears on their 1979 hit album Midnight Magic . [ 2 ]
"Still" was Anderson's second number one on the country chart, staying at the top spot for seven non-consecutive weeks. [1] The song crossed over to the pop chart, peaking at number eight. [ 2 ] Anderson performed this song on the finale of the 1977-1978 ABC game show The Better Sex which he co-hosted with Sarah Purcell .