Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... ICHIKO イチコ), born ... I SAY YES (Released July 25, 2007)
Ichiko Hashimoto (橋本 一子, Hashimoto Ichiko, born July 1, 1952 in Kobe, Japan) is a jazz pianist, composer and singer. [1] She has also acted in television and film. Hashimoto was born in Kobe, grew up in Tokyo and started playing the piano at the age of five. She attended Musashino Academia Musicae, where she graduated in 1975.
The single includes the instrumental version of "Hemisphere" that was used for the opening of RahXephon episode 4. Not included is a re-arranged synthesizer version of "Hemisphere" that appeared in the Super Robot Wars MX game itself. The only other song featured on the single is called "Music".
Spanish 21. Bring the fun back to Blackjack! 21's always win, split 4 times, double after split, double down rescue, and bonus payouts! By Masque Publishing
In 2016, Sutta released her mixtape Feline Resurrection, composed of discards from I Say Yes, via Premier League Music. She released one new song from the mixtape for free download every Friday from April 8 to June 9, 2016, starting with the first track "I Tried" with a total of 17 tracks.
Ichiko Aoba (Japanese: 青葉市子, Hepburn: Aoba Ichiko, born 28 January 1990) is a Japanese folk singer and songwriter. Her main instrument is guitar, with which she composes most of her music. Her main instrument is guitar, with which she composes most of her music.
"Say Yes" is one of Smith's widely recognized songs. [1] It is considered happy [2] and optimistic [3] in both instrumentation and lyrics in comparison to the dark tone in most of his other songs. [4] In an interview, Smith said that the song was written about "someone particular, and I almost never do that. I was really in love with someone." [5]
"Say Yes" is a Japanese single by Chage and Aska, released by Pony Canyon on July 24, 1991. The song was used as a theme of the Japanese television drama 101 kaime no Propose (101回目のプロポーズ). It was regarded as a wedding song. [2] On the Japanese Oricon weekly single charts, "Say Yes" spent 13 consecutive weeks at the number-one ...