Un duetto classico, originariamente un successo di Frank Sinatra e di sua figlia Nancy, ora registrato da Robbie e Nicole per l'album di successo Swing When You're Winning. Arrangiato a livello interm...
Stars Fell on Alabama is the title of a 1934 jazz standard composed by Frank Perkins with lyrics by Mitchell Parish. The title refers to a spectacular occurrence of the Leonid meteor shower that had b...
Show Me The Way To Go Home was the first hit of the British songwriting duo James Campbell (1903-1967) and Reg Connelly (1895-1963). Written in 1925 and self-published under the pseudonym Irving King,...
There! I've Said It Again is a classic of the Rock and Roll era. It was written in 1945 by the American lyricist Redd Evans (1912-1972) and songwriter David Mann (1916-2002) and first recorded in the...
From the Musical 'Sweet Charity'. Words by Dorothy Fields.
Written by Bud Flanagan. Additional words by Reg Connelly.
Under Paris Skies is a lyrical song, originally released in French as Sous le Ciel de Paris in 1951, and used as the theme music for the French Film of the same title. The tune was written by the Fren...
Ray Noble (1903-1978) was a composer and bandleader, working in the golden age of British dance music - the 1920's and 30's. His 1934 classic, The Very Thought Of You, for which Noble wrote both the m...
Anniversary Song (Oh, how we danced on the night we were wed) was written by Al Jolson (1886-1950) and Saul Chaplin (1912-1997) in 1946, and quickly became a hit. It featured in The Jolson Story, a fi...
Cruising Down The River was written in 1945 by Eily Beadell and Nell Tollerton, two middle-aged British women, and won a public song-writing competition. It was first recorded by Lou Preager and his O...
Lyrics by Dorothy Fields.
He'll Have To Go', words and music by Joe Allison and Audrey Allison. Arranged for piano and vocal with guitar chord symbols and boxes.
The 'In' Crowd was first written in 1964 by Billy Page and arranged by his brother Gene Page, an influential composer and arranger, who had worked with artists such as Lionel Richie, The Jackson Five...
Walt Disney, Bambi
English Words by George Brown.
French words by Louis Ducreux. English words by Harold Purcell.
The evocative Jazz standard Midnight Sun was originally written as an instrumental by Lionel Hampton (1908-2002) and Sonny Burke (1914-1980) in 1947. The story goes that Jonny Mercer (1909-1976) heard...
The Music Goes Round And Around was first written in 1935. The music was composed by the American singer-songwriters Edward 'Eddie' Farley and Michael 'Mike' Riley, who together were running their own...
Words by Harry Lenk and Ervin Drake.
Written by Ross Parker and Hughie Charles.
This classic war-time song has been arranged for piano and voice with guitar chord boxes.
A staple of the British dance band era, A Garden In The Rain was written in 1928 by Carroll Gibbons (1903-1954), with lyrics by James Dyrenforth (1895-1973). It was first performed and recorded by Gib...
Written by Fred and Doris Fisher.
Words and music by Charlie Chester, Ken Morris and Clinton Ford. Arranged for piano, voice and guitar with guitar chord symbols.
A stomping song! Nellie The Elephant, recorded by the Toy Dolls on Volume Records. Don't pack your trunk without it.
From the Musical 'Seesaw' as recorded by Shirley Bassey.
As sung by Julian Lennon in Dave Clark's 1986 musical Time. Arranged for intermediate pianists in an easy to play key, with full lyrics and guitar chord boxes.
Arthur Johnston (1898-1954) was an American composer and pianist, best known for his scores for film and stage, where he worked closely with Irving Berlin. His most successful song is undoubtedly the...
Catch A Falling Star was written by Paul Vance (b. 1929) and Lee Pockriss (1924-2011) in 1957. It was made famous by the American singer Perry Como (1912-2001), for whom the song was his last ever num...
Itsy Witsy Teeny Weeny Yellow Polkadot Bikini has topped the charts repeatedly over the decades since it first appeared in 1960. Brian Hyland was just 16 years old when he made the first recording, hi...
The Vocal/Piano-conductor's score for the Broadway standard about the adventures of a girl who wanted to be loved. Based on a screenplay by the legendary director Federico Fellini, adapted from his fi...
The Mood I'm In was co-written in 1964 by Pete King and Paul Francis Webster, both of whom enjoyed considerable individual success writing songs for film and televevision, with Francis winning 3 Acade...
Sixteen Tons is a country-folk song by Merle Travis (1917-1983). It was written in 1946, and immediately caused controversy, as the lyrics were seen as potentially subversive. They dealt with the life...
Stuart Gorrell's and Hoagy Carmichael's 'Georgia On My Mind' arranged for piano, violin and guitar. Carmichael was one of the great composers of the American popular song, such as 'Stardust' and 'Up T...
From the Musical 'Sweet Charity'. Made famous by singer Shirley Bassey.
Includes The Rhythm Of Life, Big Spender and Where Am I Going.
Bus Stop was written by the British songwriter Graham Gouldman (b. 1946) who later found fame as a Bassist and Vocalist with the Pop Rock group 10cc. It was written for the pop band The Hollies in 196...
With Glad All Over, the Dave Clark Five knocked The Beatle's 'I Want To Hold Your Hand' off its spot on the UK, US and European singles charts and thrust the band into the international spotlight. The...
Harry M. Woods (1896-1970) was an American musician, who famously started his career as a pianist despite having no fingers on his left hand. He collaborated with the English publishers Campbell and C...
From the Musical 'Sweet Charity'. Lyrics by Dorothy Fields.