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Guitar,Piano,Vocal,Voice - Level 4 - Digital Download

SKU: A0.1199669

By The Captain & Tennille. By Howard Greenfield and Neil Sedaka. Arranged by John Fries. 20th Century,Pop,Rock,Standards. Score. 3 pages. John Fries #798672. Published by John Fries (A0.1199669).

Please contact me by email at jfries@ptd.net to make a special request or to find out all that I have to offer and to express your comments or concerns.  You can also type John Fries in the searchbar to see all I have to offer.   It was first recorded by Sedaka in 1973. American pop duo Captain & Tennille covered the song in 1975, with instrumental backing almost entirely by “Captain†Daryl Dragon. Sedaka admitted lifting the main chord progression from Do It Again by The Beach Boys and added a progression including augmented chords. Neil Sedaka rerecorded a spoof of his song, renaming it Lunch Will Keep Us Together for his first children's CD Waking Up Is Hard to Do.

Love Will Keep Us Together
Piano, Voix et Guitare
The Captain & Tennille
$4.99 4.79 € Piano, Voix et Guitare PDF SheetMusicPlus

Guitar,Piano,Vocal,Voice - Level 2 - Digital Download

SKU: A0.1301445

By Barry Manilow. By Bruce Johnston. Arranged by Unimusic Academy. Contemporary,Pop,Rock,Singer/Songwriter. Score. 4 pages. Unimusic Academy (Academia Unimusica) #891073. Published by Unimusic Academy (Academia Unimusica) (A0.1301445).

I Write the Songs is a popular song written by Bruce Johnston in 1975 and released on his album Going Public in 1977. Barry Manilow's version reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in January 1976[2] after spending two weeks atop the Billboard adult contemporary chart in December 1975.[3] It won a Grammy Award for Song of the Year and was nominated for Record of the Year in 1977.[3] Billboard ranked it as the No. 13 song of 1976.[4]

The original version was recorded by Captain & Tennille, who worked with Johnston in the early 1970s with the Beach Boys. It appears on their 1975 album Love Will Keep Us Together. The first release of I Write the Songs as a single was by teen idol David Cassidy from his 1975 solo album The Higher They Climb, which was also produced by Johnston. Cassidy's version reached number 11 on the UK Singles Chart in August of that year.[5]

Johnston has stated that, for him, the I in the song is God,[2] and that songs come from the spirit of creativity in everyone. He has said that the song is not about his Beach Boys bandmate Brian Wilson.[6]

Manilow was initially reluctant to record the song, stating in his autobiography Sweet Life: The problem with the song was that if you didn't listen carefully to the lyric, you would think that the singer was singing about himself. It could be misinterpreted as a monumental ego trip.[3] After persuasion by Clive Davis, then president of Arista Records, Manilow recorded the song, and his version of I Write the Songs was the first single taken from the album Tryin' to Get the Feeling. It first charted on the Billboard Hot 100 on November 15, 1975, reaching the top of the chart nine weeks later, on January 17, 1976. Cash Box said of Manilow's version Good work Barry describing the song as melodic, ballad-like beginning grows into an operatic crescendo, all done in clear production that all age groups will appreciate.[7] Record World called it an uplifting production number and perhaps [Manilow's] strongest offering since 'Mandy.' [8].

I Write The Songs
Piano, Voix et Guitare
Barry Manilow
$8.00 7.68 € Piano, Voix et Guitare PDF SheetMusicPlus

Guitar,Piano,Vocal,Voice - Digital Download

SKU: A0.900434

Composed by Richard Rodgers. Arranged by Sir Nyukuri Edwin. Broadway,Film/TV. Score. 5 pages. SIR NYUKURI EDWIN #3368029. Published by SIR NYUKURI EDWIN (A0.900434).

Edelweiss is a show tune from the 1959 Rodgers and Hammerstein musical The Sound of Music. It is named after the edelweiss, a white flower found high in the Alps (Leontopodium alpinum). It was created for the 1959 Broadway production of The Sound of Music in the role originated by performer Theodore Bikel as a song for the character of Captain Georg Ludwig von Trapp. In the musical, Captain von Trapp and his family sing this song during the concert near the end of Act II as a statement of Austrian patriotism in the face of the pressure put upon him to join the navy of Nazi Germany following the Anschluss. It is also Captain von Trapp's subliminal goodbye to his beloved homeland, using the flower as a symbol of his loyalty to Austria. In the 1965 film adaptation, the song is also sung by the Captain earlier in the film when he rediscovers music with his children.

Edelweiss
Piano, Voix et Guitare

$5.00 4.8 € Piano, Voix et Guitare PDF SheetMusicPlus






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