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Featured in the film, Star Spangled Rhythm 1943 He Loved Me Till the All-Clear Came Harold Arlen Featured in the film, Star Spangled Rhythm 1943 On the Swing Shift Harold Arlen Featured in the film, Star Spangled Rhythm 1943 Sharp as a Tack Harold Arlen Featured in the film, Star Spangled Rhythm 1943 A Sweater, Sarong and a Peek-A-Boo Bang
Rhythm is a 2000 Indian Tamil-language romantic drama film written and directed by Vasanth and produced by V. Natarajan. The film stars Arjun and Meena with Jyothika , Ramesh Aravind , Lakshmi , Nagesh , and Manivannan in important roles.
"I Got Rhythm" is a piece composed by George Gershwin with lyrics by Ira Gershwin and published in 1930, which became a jazz standard. Its chord progression, known as the "rhythm changes", is the foundation for many other popular jazz tunes such as Charlie Parker's and Dizzy Gillespie's bebop standard "Anthropology (Thrivin' on a Riff)".
Pages in category "Rhythm and blues songs" The following 55 pages are in this category, out of 55 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B.
The Rhythmic chart (concurrently referred to as Rhythmic Songs since June 2009) debuted in Billboard Magazine in the issue dated October 3, 1992, as the Top 40/Rhythm-Crossover chart. Weekly rankings are "compiled from a national sample of airplay" as measured by Nielsen BDS monitoring rhythmic radio stations in the United States continuously.
List of songs containing the I-V-vi-IV progression; List of Negima songs; List of songs introduced by Frank Sinatra; List of songs recorded by Zecchino d'Oro; List of songs that retell a work of literature; List of songs with Latin lyrics; List of songs written and produced by Chris Braide; List of tributes to Hank Williams; List of tributes to ...
"Rhythm Nation" is a song by American singer Janet Jackson, released as the second single from her fourth studio album, Janet Jackson's Rhythm Nation 1814 (1989). It was written and produced by Jackson, in collaboration with Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis .
A tonally ambiguous ballad in D ♭ [4] first recorded on July 23, 1951, for the Genius of Modern Music sessions. [5] It also appears on 5 by Monk by 5, [6] and Solo Monk. [7] Jon Hendricks wrote lyrics to the tune and called it ”How I Wish”; it was first recorded by Carmen McRae on Carmen Sings Monk.