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Constant Change is the sixth studio album by Filipino singer-songwriter Jose Mari Chan.It was released in the Philippines on May 25, 1989, by Universal Records.The album has produced "Beautiful Girl", "Please Be Careful with My Heart", "My Girl, My Woman, My Friend" and "I Have Fallen in Love (With the Same Woman Three Times)".
Jose Mari Lim Chan (Tagalog: [hoˈse mɐˈɾi ˈtʃan]; born March 11, 1945), born José Mari Chan y Lim, is a Filipino singer, songwriter, businessman and TV presenter. Regarded as one of the country’s most renowned balladeers and composers, [ 3 ] he is popularly dubbed as the "King of Philippine Christmas Carols".
Romance Revisited: The Love Songs of Jose Mari Chan is the fourth studio album by Filipino singer Christian Bautista, released in the Philippines on August 20, 2009, by Universal Records. The album consists of nineteen Jose Mari Chan -originals, including duets with Sarah Geronimo , Regine Velasquez , Lani Misalucha and Chan himself. [ 2 ]
The post Who is Jose Mari Chan and why is he trending in the PH? appeared first on Coconuts. While the rest of the world was pretty chill over the weekend, many Filipinos were excited over the ...
Cañiza would later replace the poem with the lyrics of "Christmas in Our Hearts" as we know it today, using Chan's melody for Ang Tubig ay Buhay. Chan also contributed some words to the song upon its submission, wherein his record producer, Bella Dy Tan, gave her opinion that the song was not going to sell because it was a Christian song.
I Believe (Dr. Alban album), and the title song, 1997; I Believe (Irfan Makki album), and the title song, 2011; I Believe (Johnny Cash album), a 1984 reissue of songs from A Believer Sings the Truth (1979)
It should only contain pages that are Jose Mari Chan songs or lists of Jose Mari Chan songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Jose Mari Chan songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
National Artist Levi Celerio also wrote Tagalog lyrics to the song during the 1950s. The song is still sung today in various communities, especially in churches both in the Philippines and abroad (usually during the end of the Holy Mass). [1] Ang Pasko ay Sumapit is in public domain as an unprotected work.