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The Broadway cast recording of the 1957 musical The Music Man was released as an album by Capitol Records. The original release formats included LP, 4×EP, and reel-to-reel tape. [2] The album spent several weeks at number one on Billboard's Best Selling LPs chart. [5]
Jeremy Dacre Ball [1] [2] (10 August 1968 – 15 September 2014) was an Australian politician, actor and activist. Ball served as the deputy mayor of Launceston, Tasmania's second-largest city, from 2011 until his death in 2014 due to a car accident. He was a member of the Tasmanian Greens, the state chapter of the Australian Greens. [3] [4]
Once: A New Musical (Original Broadway Cast Recording) is the cast album to the 2012 Broadway musical Once based on the 2007 film of the same name directed by John Carney. Like the film, Glen Hansard and Markéta Irglová composed the music and penned the lyrics for the songs which were performed by Steve Kazee , Cristin Milioti , and other ...
“Coincidence,” an early standout track on Sabrina Carpenter’s sixth studio album “Short n’ Sweet,” has fans entering detective mode. On X, the platform formerly known as Twitter ...
The music of Once will likely make your feet blister with empathy for these onscreen strugglers." [12] Embo Blake of Hybrid Magazine wrote "If the songs on Once are any indication, then any rumors of Hansard's momentary madness are baseless and the man continues to climb his life's ladder, embracing his brilliant artistic vision. These songs ...
Jeremy Renner is ringing in the new year with the release of his Life and Titanium album, which was inspired by his harrowing snowplow accident. Renner, 52, took to Instagram on Friday, December ...
"Anything Could Happen" received positive reviews from critics, with most praising the lyrical content and Goulding's vocals. Lewis Corner of Digital Spy gave "Anything Could Happen" four out of five stars, stating, "'After the war we said we'd fight together/ I guess we thought that's what humans do,' the electro-folk starlet serenades over a booming bass synth and choppy piano, before ...
"Once" is the middle chapter of a trilogy of songs in what Vedder later described as a "mini-opera" entitled Mamasan, with it being preceded by "Alive" and followed by "Footsteps". "Once" tells the tale of a man's descent into madness which leads him into becoming a serial killer. [2] During the bridge of the song, Vedder can be heard muttering.