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A Star Is Born became Gaga's longest running number-one album in the US, while it was Cooper's first album to top the charts. A Star Is Born opened atop the US Billboard 200 with 231,000 album-equivalent units, including 162,000 pure album sales. It had the biggest overall sales week for a soundtrack in over three years, and is Gaga's fifth US ...
"I'll Never Love Again" is a song from the 2018 film A Star Is Born, performed by its stars Lady Gaga and director Bradley Cooper whose character sings the final chorus in the flashback scene. The soundtrack contained both versions of the song including the extended version that featured Gaga
Lady Gaga has watered down a key lyric to her popular A Star Is Born soundtrack song "Always Remember Us This Way," during a Thursday evening performance at the FireAid concert benefiting those ...
"Maybe It's Time" is a song from the 2018 film A Star Is Born and the soundtrack of the same name, performed by Bradley Cooper. It was written by Jason Isbell and produced by Cooper and Benjamin Rice with additional vocal production by Lady Gaga. The song is a country ballad with lyrics on the theme of salvation and redemption.
Lady Gaga's longtime choreographer, Richy Jackson, opened up about how he helped craft Ally's vibe in 'A Star Is Born.'
The track is sung by Gaga's in-movie character, Ally, as a loving ode to Bradley Cooper's character, Jackson. It plays during the end credits of the original, theatrical cut of A Star Is Born, while appearing in the wedding scene in its extended, Encore edition. The song charted within the top 30 in Hungary, Scotland, and Slovakia.
Gaga closed out the show with two songs from the “A Star is Born” soundtrack, and ended with a new song that she said she wrote with her fiancé Michael Polanksy just for FireAid.
The original soundtrack to the 1954 film A Star Is Born was released by Columbia Records in late 1954 in four formats: as a set of five 10-inch 78-rpm shellac records, a set of three EPs, as a 10-inch 33-rpm long-play, and as a 12-inch long-play. [3] The latter was Columbia's first "de luxe" LP priced at 6.95 dollars. [4]