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What Bob Seger Song Is In This Movie Clip

Perhaps your question is better asked as what is the meaning of the song Turn the Page by Bob Seger ?    Seger wrote it in 1972  about life on the road as a musician and it was released on the album 'Back in '72'.    It came to prominance after it was released on the Live Bullet album and has been on constant rotation since then.  It features Alto Reed's famous saxophone intro. Metallica and others covered it in the years since.

What is the song that Birdie and her Father dance to in the nursing home in the movie Hope Floats?

The song is "Chances Are." I don't know who is singing during the scene... I haven't seen it in a while, but Bob Seger and Martina McBride recorded it together for the soundtrack.

Someone wiser has said, life would have been a lot more interesting if it had background music and I agree wholeheartedly. For me, the soundtrack of a movie is essential to the whole movie experience. From a purely personal point of view, a good soundtrack can turn an average movie into a good one (Garden State being a good example in this category with a Grammy winning soundtrack), a good movie into a great one (American Hustle and Finding Neverland are good examples), and a great movie into the kind of movie you keep going back to ((500) Days of Summer and Into the Wild being the cases in point here). Apart from their good usage in the respective movies, all these soundtracks are good even for idle listening.Then there are some soundtracks which, even though are great in their own right, you might not want to listen to again. Take for example, Requiem for a Dream's soundtrack and in particular Summer Overture, which inevitably takes me back to the drug induced paranoia that the characters in the movie go through.And then there are some songs which have been used so impeccably in a movie that they are inextricably linked to the movie, or a scene of the movie, in my memory. For example, I can't listen to Gimme Shelter without thinking of the opening of The Departed, beautifully supplementing Jack Nicholson's voice and predicting the things to come:Or listen to Layla's piano interlude without thinking of this scene from Goodfellas:And now, listen to Live and Let Die without thinking of this awesome Jennifer Lawrence performance:Even though I like all the soundtracks I have mentioned until now, I would have to say that A Clockwork Orange takes top place in my list for the best movie soundtrack, simply because Stanley Kubrick has used it so effectively in the movie. To wit:and the more haunting one:WARNING: Graphic contentYou have to see the original Singin' in the Rain to really appreciate why Malcolm McDowell's rendition of the song in the above scene is so scarring, other than for the obvious reasons.After watching a movie, when the first thing that comes to your mind on listening to Ludwig Van's 9th Symphony or on seeing Gene Kelly dancing around merrily in the rain is "ultra-violence", that is when you realize just how effective the soundtrack of the movie was.

"Tell me too much talking about saying anything?, all I need a someone who makes me wanna sing!" - take me to your heart" laughing hard with a windows down"-"catch my breath"" hand over heart I'm praying"" save your advice cause I won't hear , you might be a right but I don't care"- heart wants what it wants"you trying to be cool but you look like a fool to me"-complicated" I feel something so wrong doing the right thing ,I feel something so right doing the wrong thing"- counting stars" never wanna see us fighting, let's forget the thunder in lighting"- I will be waiting" the music got me going , don't stop it till the morning"-slow down" I 've got your photography, but baby I need more than that"- some body to you" gotta long list of ex-lover they will tell you am insane!""you look like my next mistake"- blank space"past the black where the siren sing"- castle of glassList goes on... songs which I have mentioned above are awesome along with its lyrics. check them out!Edit:“Okay I'm insane, but your the same!”-bad things“Life is about making mistakes, it's also about trying to be great”-At my best“Will you still care in the morning? When the magics gone gone”-Wake up alone“Sometimes you gotta burn some bridges to just to create some distances”“Everyone I do right does me wrong”“All alone I watch you watch her like she's the only thing you've ever see. How is it you never notice that you are slowly killing me?”-I hate you, I love you“I didn't come for a fight but I'll fight till the end”“Frame me up on the wall just to keep me out of trouble”-Irresistible“Where do you go when your story's done? You can be who you were or who'll you become”-Just hold on

Trying to find the perfect wedding song.?

Recently got married 8 months ago... and I walked down the isle to "Have you ever" by Brandy....It starts of soooo nice and then the beat drops and she's singing so perfect...I only used half the song because I wanted the dj to lower it as I walked mid way to the groom....it was very nice and I got so many compliments on it....Every one said that they cried as soon as it got lowered and I continued walking...it was like this is my and only my momment....you will have it...

Father-daughter dance....didn't have one my dad was outside getting his drink on...which was okay because I was so tired I wasn't up for pictures, dancing or anything else....

That day you will be exhausted.... I didn't sleep the entire week of my wedding...

What is the song on Death metal Rooster Called?

Hi there. The music in that clip was written and recorded by Ewan Parry specifically for the video, it's not taken from a pre-existing song or anything.

Ewan does, however, play in a band called Talanas, who have just released their debut EP, and it's been getting rave reviews so you should check it out if you like that type of thing and want to support them and their music:

http://www.talanas.org

http://www.myspace.com/talanas

Who performed the very first rock and roll dance in the movie?

I am not sure it is the very first, pretty close. Check out this clip from "Rock Around the Clock", 1956.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pLIk193a2...

I remember we started doing the Bop to "Shaboom" in 1954. As a matter of fact at my eight grade graduation dance, 1956, we did the Bop to "Rock Around the Clock", so the movie did not really represent the kids at the time.

Do a YouTube search on American Bandstand to see examples of the Bop, the Stroll, the Twist and other dances we did.

Celine Dion is in my trio of cack. Together with Mariah Carey and Eric Clapton at some point many many years ago I became aware that these three people’s music, for some reason just annoyed me, in a way other music I considered rubbish did not. When they come on the radio, I actively want to change the station. Yes, I know it’s my problem, and yes I fully realise that they don’t care what I think and yes, what have I ever done in my life blah blah blah. However, for me, Mariah Carey is an awful, awful vocalist. She’s all technique. She doesn’t sing, doesn’t emote, doesn’t express, she just shows off. Every song she ruins with her vocal ups and downs and around and arounds. Vocal gymnastics for the sake of it. Zero expression. An instrumental version of any Mariah Carey track is immediately an improvement.Eric Clapton (musically, I don’t pretend to know anything about his character or personality) is just so tedious that I feel it physically in the pit of my stomach. Yes he can play guitar, though his style is not one I enjoy, but his solo career is unrelenting tedeem. His music is so boring I can’t find anything else to say about it. It sucks life force from the world. The end.Celine Dion doesn’t sing either. She throats. Just cough, woman. Please. Arianna Grande does a great impersonation of her, that totally nails that. And her vocals always seem to be an exercise in power, even when the actual volume of her singing is quiet, at the expense of any nuance or subtlety. On top of that, her songs are so big, such big, dull productions, like blocks of musical cement, weighing the whole thing down.And yet, and yet, there’s Falling into You. I’m not making it out to be some classic or anything, and I don’t own it, but it is really quite lovely. The arrangement is restrained, fragile, gentle with quite a sweet chorus. And the voice, can it really be Celine Dion? it doesn’t hit you, it caresses you. It’s soft, warm, vulnerable, human.But it’s Celine Dion, I can’t like it. Must. Not. Like. But I can’t help it. I like it and that’s that. There, I’ve come out. My name is Phil and I like a Celine Dion song.

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