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"Rainbow" is a piano ballad in the key of E-flat major with a slow tempo of approximately 64 beats per minute. Musgraves' vocals range from G 3-E ♭ 5. [2] The song was penned by Musgraves with Shane McAnally and Natalie Hemby six years prior to its release as the closing track on Golden Hour. According to the singer, it began as an ...
In 2002, Robin Carmody of Freaky Trigger described the harmonica-led "Rainbow" as "a desperately poignant final aim for a love (or rather, perhaps, a feeling of personal contentment) fading inexorably, desperately looking out to feel it as it dies", concluding that it is "a wonderful song of yearning, and is the perfect farewell to the dying 20 ...
Daniel Wood Gatton Jr. (September 4, 1945 – October 4, 1994) was an American virtuoso guitarist who combined blues, rockabilly, jazz, and country to create a musical style he called "redneck jazz". [ 1 ]
Russ Conway on his 1973 album Playing the Great Piano Hits; Harrison Craig; Bing Crosby; Sammy Davis Jr. Alice Faye for film Rose of Washington Square (1939), a thinly veiled biography of Fanny Brice [23] Ferrante & Teicher; The Four Freshmen – Voices In Love (1958), Road Show (1960) Road Show is a concert album with the singers backed by ...
Rainbow. Ritchie Blackmore – guitar, bass on tracks 1–3, 6 (also bass on rough mix tracks 1–6, 2012 Deluxe Edition) Ronnie James Dio – vocals; Cozy Powell – drums; Bob Daisley – bass on tracks 4, 5, and 7; David Stone – keyboards on tracks 4, 5, and 6, piano outro on track 3; Tony Carey – keyboards on tracks 1, 2, and 8 ...
Rainbow is a popular song written by Curtis Mayfield. Recorded by Gene Chandler in 1962, the single released on Vee-Jay Records [ 1 ] spent 12 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. [ 2 ] In 1965, Gene Chandler scored another hit with this song when he recorded Rainbow '65 (Part 1) .
Stranger in Us All is the eighth studio album by the British hard rock band Rainbow, released on 21 August 1995 by RCA Records.This was the band's first studio album in twelve years, and originally intended to be a solo album by Blackmore, but due to pressures from BMG, it was billed as Ritchie Blackmore's Rainbow, which saw him putting together a new line-up featuring himself and four then ...
The song has been used to teach children names of colours. [1] [2] Despite the name of the song, two of the seven colours mentioned ("red and yellow and pink and green, purple and orange and blue") – pink and purple – are not actually a colour of the rainbow (i.e. they are not spectral colors; pink is a variation of shade, and purple is the human brain's interpretation of mixed red/blue ...