Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Tell Him" is a song written by Linda Thompson and producers Walter Afanasieff and David Foster. It was recorded as a duet between American singer Barbra Streisand and Canadian singer Celine Dion for their respective 1997 albums, Higher Ground and Let's Talk About Love , and released as the lead single from these albums on November 3, 1997.
Love Notes is a jazz album by Ramsey Lewis that was recorded in 1976–77 and released in 1977 by Columbia. [4] The album reached No. 7 on the US Billboard Top Jazz Albums chart and No. 31 on the US Billboard Top Soul Albums chart.
Love Notes may refer to: Notes of Love, a 1998 Italian-French romance film, also known as Love Notes; Love Notes (Ramsey Lewis album), a 1977 jazz album by Ramsey Lewis;
It is an up-tempo pop song drawing influence from gospel and dance music, and its lyrics detail the abilities that love has as an emotion. "Love Can Move Mountains" was later included on Dion's greatest hits albums, All the Way... A Decade of Song in 1999 and My Love: Ultimate Essential Collection in 2008.
Love Notes/Letter Bombs is the third full-length studio album by Indie pop band The Submarines. It was released on April 5, 2011, through the Canadian label Nettwerk . Recording
And Love Said No: The Greatest Hits 1997–2004 is a greatest hits album by Finnish rock band HIM. It contains two new songs: "And Love Said No" and "Solitary Man", the latter of which is a Neil Diamond cover, both songs produced by Tim Palmer. The British version also has a re-recorded version of "It's All Tears (Drown in This Love)".
The album failed to achieve success on international music markets. Following another hiatus and a label shift to Epic Records , her fifth studio album Human was released in December 2008. The album spawned two singles " Right Here (Departed) " and " Long Distance ", of which both reached the top of the Billboard Hot Dance Club Play chart. [ 7 ]
"Unexpected Song" is a 1984 song from the musical Song and Dance originally sung (on Broadway) by Bernadette Peters. The music was written by Andrew Lloyd Webber, with lyrics by Don Black. It is one of Lloyd Webber's most frequently performed compositions. [1]