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The song is a key example of how musical continuity is present across the soundtrack, with "Two Worlds" woven into the musical tapestry of the film multiple times. [1] Phil Collins recorded the song in English (Two Worlds), Spanish (Dos Mundos), Italian (Se vuoi), French (Entre deux mondes), and German (Zwei Welten). [2]
A cover version of the song was recorded by Roger Williams and Jane Morgan which reached number 41 on the Billboard chart. A recording by Ronnie Hilton in the same year reached number 13 on the UK Singles Chart. [4] In 1965, Lenny Welch recorded the song peaking at number 6 on the Easy Listening chart and number 61 on the Hot 100. [5]
Two Different Worlds may refer to: "Two Different Worlds" (1956 song) , a song co-written in 1956 by Sid Wayne and Al Frisch "Two Different Worlds", a song by LL Cool J from his 1989 album Walking with a Panther
[14] [15] The original game and the two expansions were packed together and sold as Two Worlds: Epic Edition. It was released on 19 August 2008 in North America and on 12 September 2008 in Europe. [16] Since release, there have been numerous patches to improve the gameplay, graphics, and controls. [17]
When Two Worlds Collide was Lewis's second album after leaving Mercury Records and peaked at number 32 on the Billboard country albums chart. The title track was released as a single, making it to number 11, while the Jerry Chestnut song "Honky Tonk Stuff" reached number 28.
AllMusic's Jonathan Widran concludes his review with, "Timeless yet contemporary, Two Worlds is beautiful reunion of these musical soul mates." [1]Hilarie Grey of JazzTimes begins her favorable review with, "perennial jazz all-stars Lee Ritenour and Dave Grusin reach new career highs with the classically oriented Two Worlds."
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The song reached number nine on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart and number ninety-nine on the Billboard Hot 100 in early 1966. "I'm Living in Two Worlds" became Guitar's first Country top-ten single and her first charting single since 1959. [ 2 ]