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"Love Theme from St. Elmo's Fire" is the theme from the 1985 film St. Elmo's Fire by David Foster. It was performed in two versions: one as an instrumental by Foster (released as a single) and another with lyrics added and performed as a duet by Amy Holland and Donny Gerrard, subtitled "For Just a Moment".
"St. Elmo's Fire (Man in Motion)" is a song by British singer John Parr from the 1985 film St. Elmo's Fire. It hit No. 1 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart on 7 September 1985, remaining there for two weeks. It was the main theme for Joel Schumacher's film, and first single from the soundtrack. The song was created and edited within 24 hours. [4]
Songs written by Foster, with original artists, co-writers and originating album, showing year released. ... "Love Theme from St. Elmo's Fire (Instrumental ...
David Foster is a solo album by David Foster, released in 1986.The album is mainly instrumental with two duet-style songs featuring rare vocals from Foster himself. This work led to Foster receiving the Juno Award for "Instrumental Artist of the Year" in 1986 and 1987, [2] and a Grammy Award nomination for "Best Pop Instrumental Performance" in 1986.
St. Elmo's Fire was a summer movie, originally hitting theaters on June 28, 1985. A few months later, some fans decided to dress up as Billy Hicks for Halloween. "It was surreal. It was the first ...
Parr and Foster wrote "St. Elmo's Fire" in honour of wheelchair athlete and activist Rick Hansen; it became the theme to St. Elmo's Fire [5] (a "Brat Pack" film unrelated to Hansen's life or achievements). [6] Parr later wrote "Under a Raging Moon" with Julia Downes for Roger Daltrey, [6] a song that paid tribute to Keith Moon and told the ...
The actor also teased what his character, saxophonist Billy Hicks, has been up to since the end of the original film. "As you remember, at the end of St. Elmo's Fire, he got on a bus to New York ...
'St. Elmo's Fire' was one of those quintessential '80s movies featuring many of everyone's favorite Brat Pack stars. The movie, directed by Joel Schumacher, was released on June 28, 1985.