Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The destination of a chord progression is known as a cadence, or two chords that signify the end or prolongation of a musical phrase. The most conclusive and resolving cadences return to the tonic or I chord; following the circle of fifths , the most suitable chord to precede the I chord is a V chord.
SSQ also contributed two tracks, "Tonight (We'll Make Love Until We Die)" and "Trash's Theme", to the soundtrack of the 1985 zombie flick The Return of the Living Dead. "Tonight" is the track played by boom box when Trash, played by Linnea Quigley , performs the film's famous graveyard striptease.
In 1960 the song was recorded as a pop and R&B duet by Dinah Washington and Brook Benton.The single was the second pairing for the singers and, like their first single together, it went to number 1 on the R&B chart and was a top ten pop single as well.
She appeared on her brother's subsequent albums: Shut Up and Die Like an Aviator and Transcendental Blues. After returning from tour, she wrote songs and performed them at writer's nights in Nashville. [2] Later, she set up her own songwriters' night to get some more time on stage.
Adamant and the literary form adamantine occur in works such as The Faerie Queene, Paradise Lost, Gulliver's Travels, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, The Lord of the Rings, [4] and the film Forbidden Planet (as "adamantine steel"). All these uses predate the use of adamantium in Marvel's comics. [4]
The song, renamed "(I Can't Help) Falling in Love with You", was released on May 10, 1993 by Virgin Records, and eventually climbed to No. 1 on the US Billboard Hot 100, staying there for seven weeks, becoming their 4th and last top 10 hit. It also topped the charts of 11 other countries, including Australia, Austria, the Netherlands, New ...
"Give You All My Love" is a song by American singer Stacey Q. It was released on May 25, 1989 as the lead single from her third studio album, Nights Like This , in 1989 by Atlantic Records . Written by Stacey Swain and David Cole and produced by Cole and Robert Clivillés , "Give You All My Love" is primarily a dance-pop song.
Jon Dolan of Rolling Stone called the song "a big, goofy, stomp-along pop-metal anthem". [14] Jason Lipshutz of Billboard described the song as "a natural evolution of the Fall Out Boy sound," adding also that the song is "muscular in scope and jittery in practice, with rolling chants cresting above Stump's nervous energy."