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Joy of Life (Chinese: 庆余年; pinyin: Qìng Yúnián), also known as Thankful for the Remaining Years, is a 2019 Chinese television series that is based on the novel Qing Yunian (庆余年) by Mao Ni. [1] It stars Zhang Ruoyun, Li Qin and Chen Daoming. [2] [3] [4] The series premiered on Tencent Video and iQiyi on November 26, 2019. [5]
"Joy" has been featured on the soundtracks of the films Boogie Nights, [5] One Day in September [4] and The 40-Year-Old Virgin, [6] as well as the television series The Man Who Fell to Earth. [7] While not featured on the Battle of the Sexes soundtrack, the song is heard during a scene in the film and is cited in the end credits.
Masters of Horror is the soundtrack accompanying the television series Masters of Horror. Volume 1 sold over 50,000 copies. ... "Keith the Music" Every Time I Die: 3: ...
"Transmission" is a song by English post-punk band Joy Division. Originally recorded in 1978 for the band's aborted self-titled album , it was later re-recorded the following year at a faster tempo and released by record label Factory as the band's debut single.
According to Studio MaumC, Joy will be participating at the soundtrack for the drama series Hospital Playlist, revealing "Introduce Me a Good Person" would be released at noon of March 20, 2020. [1] The song is a remake of the same name released by Basis in 1996. [ 2 ]
"Joy of My Life" is a 1997 song written and originally recorded by American musician John Fogerty. It was released on his 1997 fifth solo album Blue Moon Swamp . In 2022, the song was released by country music singer Chris Stapleton as a single from his album Starting Over .
"Joyride" is a song by Swedish pop duo Roxette. Written by Per Gessle , it was released on 25 February 1991 by EMI as the lead single from their third studio album , Joyride (1991). It became one of Roxette's biggest hits and was one of the most successful singles of 1991, topping multiple record charts across Europe, as well as in Australia ...
Reviewing for Record Mirror, Peter Jones described "The Joy of Living" as "super-gentle, vocally, but not for long. Beautiful crisp Marvin guitar spasms, full chorus, and a sort of Gospel build-up. Do listen to the lyrics, which are thoughtfully strong. Actually, a darned good and repetitive pop record." [4]