Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Je m'appelle Barbra (1966) is the eighth studio album released by American singer Barbra Streisand.She sings much of the album in French. The album peaked at #5 on the Billboard 200, and was certified gold by the RIAA on April 24, 2002, almost 36 years after its original release.
In 1966 Barbra Streisand released her 8th album, Je m'appelle Barbra, with Le mur on it, sung all in French. Most of the songs on the Je m'appelle Barbra album were conducted by the great Michel Legrand, the first time Streisand and Legrand worked together. Later, an American lyricist, Earl Shuman, wrote an English-language version titled "I've ...
My Name Is Barbra is a 1965 black-and-white television special, the first for singer and actress Barbra Streisand. Broadcast in conjunction with the release of Streisand's studio album of the same name, the special aired April 28, 1965 on CBS. A critical success, the program earned Streisand a contract for four additional television specials.
"Nobody, that is, except Barbra." A song called "Look" (originally recorded for the previous album, Je m'appelle Barbra) was included as a b-side to the single: "Stout-Hearted Men". [3] Streisand also recorded "Willow Weep for Me" and "Spring Can Really Hang You Up The Most" during these sessions. Both songs were not included in Simply ...
(Barbra Streisand/Eddy Marnay) (Je m’appelle Barbra – 1966) 7. I Don’t Know Where I Stand (Joni Mitchell) (Stoney End – 1971) 8. I Never Meant To Hurt You (Laura Nyro) (Barbra Joan ...
Classical Barbra [1] is the eighteenth studio album by American singer Barbra Streisand, released in February 1976. It was recorded in 1973 and consists of songs by classical European composers and includes tracks sung in English, French, Occitan , German, Italian and Latin.
My Name Is Barbra is the first of two studio album tie-ins by Barbra Streisand for her debut television special of the same name, which aired April 28, 1965, on CBS-TV. Boosted by the critical acclaim for the broadcast, the album was certified gold and peaked at #2 on the US charts; by 1966, the album sold over one million copies worldwide.
In 1966, Streisand released her eighth album, Je m'appelle Barbra, with "Le mur" on it, sung all in French. [11] Most of the songs on the Je m'appelle Barbra album were arranged and conducted by Michel Legrand, the first time Streisand and Legrand had worked together. [11]