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In the UK, "We'll Sing in the Sunshine" was covered by The Lancastrians in a version produced by Shel Talmy and featuring guitar work from both Jimmy Page and Big Jim Sullivan. [17] It charted at No. 44 in the UK in December 1964. [18] [19] The New Christy Minstrels included a bossa-nova version of the song on their 1965 album, Chim Chim Cher-ee.
The song is an adaptation of BWO's "Sunshine in the Rain", with the original composition by Alexander Bard and Anders Hansson. The lyrics were rewritten by Luke Tsui, while the production was handled by Michael Lin. The song was released by EMI and Mars on September 21, 2007. [1]
"Sunshine in the Rain" is an electronica song performed by Swedish band BWO. The song was released as a sixth single from their first album, Prototype in Sweden, on 15 September 2005. The single peaked at number 12 on the Swedish single chart .
"Sunshine in the Rain" (Tom Harrell) – 7:02 "Song of the Canopy" (Geoff Keezer) – 8:15 "Santana" (Fritz Pauer) – 10:37 "Beside Myself" (Harrell) – 5:29
Recording was so new in '69 and '70. There was a song on the album called 'Please Find Me', and for some reason the engineer rolled over it. It got erased. We spent hours looking for it. We fired the engineer and put "Sunshine" in its place. [3] Like most of the songs on Jonathan Edwards, "Sunshine" was written shortly after Edwards left the ...
Tuff Guitar English Style (United Artists, 1965) Tuff Guitar Tijuana Style (United Artists, 1966) Romantico (United Artists, 1966) King Guitar (United Artists, 1967) The Power of Brass (United Artists, 1968) It Must Be Him (United Artists, 1968) Let the Sunshine In (United Artists, 1969) Soft Guitars (Bainbridge, 1980) In a Spanish Mood (Accord ...
Sunshine and Rain is the eleventh studio album by American country singer Connie Smith, released in October 1968 by RCA Victor. Sunshine and Rain featured an assortment of both new material and covers of songs by other country artists.
"Ain't No Sunshine" is a song by Bill Withers, from his 1971 debut album Just As I Am, produced by Booker T. Jones. The record featured musicians Donald "Duck" Dunn on bass guitar, Al Jackson Jr. on drums and Stephen Stills on guitar. [ 2 ]