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"Maybe I'm Amazed" Candice Bergen and Win Butler: Miley Cyrus "50 Ways to Leave Your Lover" Christopher Walken: Kanye West: Medley of "Jesus Walks", "Only One," and "Wolves" (the latter with Sia and Vic Mensa) Jack White: Paul Simon "Still Crazy After All These Years"
"Maybe I'm Amazed" is a song written by the English musician Paul McCartney that was first released on his 1970 debut solo album McCartney. Although the original recording has never been released as a single, a live performance by McCartney's later band Wings, from the live album Wings over America, was released in 1977; this version became a top-ten hit in the United States and reached number ...
Remastered (Record Store Day 2013 exclusive) vinyl 12-inch single of "Maybe I'm Amazed" [32] Rockshow on DVD and Blu-ray digitally restored from the 35mm negative with remixed 5.1 surround sound [33] Discs one & two (standard edition): Sides one to three are on disc one, while sides four to six are on disc two. Disc three
"Maybe I'm Amazed" appears in the special and deluxe editions of McCartney from 2011. "Soily", "Baby Face" and "Love My Baby" (digital download) appear in the special and deluxe editions of Venus and Mars from 2014.
Joyful Noise is the soundtrack album to the 2012 film of the same name, starring Queen Latifah and Dolly Parton.The soundtrack was released on January 10, 2012, by WaterTower Music and contains three original compositions by Parton.
Also recorded during this period was the band's cover of the Temptations' "(I Know) I'm Losing You" which later appeared on lead singer Rod Stewart's solo album Every Picture Tells a Story rather than on a Faces release. The band's performance on the track was acknowledged with a 'thank-you' from Stewart in the LP's liner notes.
Jem released two music videos for "They". The UK version, directed by Laurent Briet, [3] features Jem stripping herself in a spaceship in the style of Jane Fonda in the opening scene of Barbarella (although she remains covered by strategically placed light based holograms of planetary orbital paths); this is actually a boy dreaming about her as he constructs a model of the same spaceship back ...
"Listen to What the Man Said" was recorded in early 1975 by Wings during their New Orleans sessions for Venus and Mars. [2] [10] [11] It was a song for which Paul McCartney had high hopes, but early recordings did not live up to the song's potential.