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This Could Be the Night is a 1957 American MGM comedy-drama film directed by Robert Wise and starring Jean Simmons and Paul Douglas. Anthony Franciosa made his debut in the film, which is based on the short stories by Cornelia Baird Gross .
This Could Be the Night may refer to: "This Could Be the Night" (1966 song), a 1966 song written by Harry Nilsson and Phil Spector "This Could Be the Night" (Loverboy song), a 1986 song by Loverboy; This Could Be the Night, a 1957 film directed by Robert Wise
"This Could Be the Night" was slated for release as MFQ's first single with the new lineup, but Spector became focused on Tina Turner and "River Deep – Mountain High" and "forgot all about the Modern Folk Quartet ". [10] Instead it was used as the theme to the rock concert film The Big TNT Show, the 1965 follow-up to the T.A.M.I. Show. [12]
"This Could Be the Night" is a song written by Paul Dean, Mike Reno, Bill Wray and Jonathan Cain, and recorded by the Canadian rock band Loverboy from their hit album, Lovin' Every Minute of It, released in 1985.
Their biggest hit single was "Tonight (Could Be the Night)", which hit #26 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1961. [1] The follow-up, "Laugh", peaked at #90, [ 1 ] and after a half-dozen further singles the group disbanded.
"Somebody Like You" (Don Barnes, Jeff Carlisi, Larry Steele, Donnie Van Zant, Jim Vallance) – 4:08 "Like No Other Night" (Barnes, Carlisi, Vallance, John Bettis) – 3:59
This Could Be the Start of Something is a studio album by Mark Murphy. This Could Be the Start of Something is the third album by American jazz vocalist Mark Murphy and his first of three for Capitol Records. It was recorded in 1958 when Murphy was 26 years old and released by the Capitol Records label in the United States in 1959.
"This Night" is a song by Billy Joel released as the sixth single from his album An Innocent Man. The basis of the song's chorus uses the second movement of Ludwig van Beethoven's Pathétique Sonata. [1] Beethoven is credited as one of the song's writers on the sleeve of the album as "L.v. Beethoven".