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Jimmy Durante recorded a humorous song called "I'm the Guy Who Found the Lost Chord", which he also sings in the 1947 film This Time for Keeps. [18] George and Ira Gershwin wrote a song called "That Lost Barber Shop Chord", which was included in their 1926 revue Americana. [19] The Moody Blues produced an album called In Search of the Lost Chord in
He Loved Me To Death; He Must Die; He Never Once Stopped Believing In Me; He Never Sends Me Where He's Never Been; He Plants Me Like A Seed; He Restoreth My Soul (In the Valley) He Sees Me Through The Blood; He Waits For The Sound Of My Voice; He Was The Talk Of The Town; He Went Out Of His Way; He's Already On His Way; Headed For Judgment
Called Adam by his name [20] And he refused to answer Because he's naked and ashamed [21] [Repeat verses 1 & 2] You know Christ had twelve apostles [22] And three he led away [23] He said, "Watch with me one hour, [24] 'till I go yonder and pray." [Repeat verses 1 & 2] Christ came on Easter morning Mary and Martha went down to see [25]
Lead Me to that Rock; Leave Me Alone with the Blues; Let the Spirit Descend [1] Let's Turn Back the Years; The Little House We Built (Just o'er the Hill) (co-written with Don Helms) Little Paper Boy; The Log Train; Long Gone Lonesome Blues; Lord, Build Me a Cabin in Glory; Lord, I'm Coming Home; Lost on the River (with Audrey Williams)
"Why Me" was Kristofferson's lone major country hit as a solo recording artist, reaching No. 1 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart in July 1973. [4] The song peaked only at No. 16 on the Billboard Hot 100, but had at that time one of the longer runs (19 weeks) in the top 40 [1] and the most chart reversals (6) in one run on the Hot 100.
the song's popularity mandates its inclusion in any concert Clark gives in the English-speaking world; Clark generally performs the song combining French lyrics with the English. the one published biography of Clark written to date (by Andrea Kon in 1983) is titled This Is My Song (W.H. Allen & Co. Ltd.).
Charlotte Church has denied the song “From the River to the Sea” is antisemitic after she belted out a rendition at a pro-Palestine concert.. The Welsh musician was recorded singing the ...
The song is sung by an offscreen chorus in the 1944 race film Go Down, Death!. An African American soldier during the second episode of Roberto Rossellini's Paisan (1946) sings this song to a little Italian boy. In the movie Young Man with a Horn (1950), the song is played at the memorial service for the character Art Hazzard.