saloon song造句
例句与造句
- The blessing was that his interpretation of his saloon songs just kept getting better.
- After they divorce, Sinatra pours his soul into a series of unforgettable " saloon songs ."
- After releasing " Saloon Song " on Barsuk, they played a 2001 national tour with Death Cab.
- "I would like to do a saloon song for you, if I may, " he says.
- A collection of what Sinatra called " saloon songs ", it includes Alec Wilder's " A Long Night ".
- It's difficult to find saloon song in a sentence. 用saloon song造句挺难的
- Then, with dramatic flourish, he announced that having built his career on saloon songs, he would end it the same way.
- His last movie, " Frankie and Johnny " in 1966, featured Elvis Presley singing saloon songs in a riverboat setting.
- He was often too self-conscious to sing, but when he did, he chose saloon songs associated with Frank Sinatra and Charles Aznavour.
- It's almost like a saloon song you shouldn't pay any attention to, and the lyric means practically everything in the world.
- An employee at Wherehouse Music also found the song on Roselli's " Saloon Songs Volume II, " but again, there was only one copy of the CD in the store when I called last week.
- Few cinematic images of the 1970s are as striking as that of the bare-breasted Charlotte Rampling in Nazi regalia singing a German saloon song in Liliana Cavani's soft-core art film " The Night Porter ."
- These were not the ancient, anonymous Anglo ballads they might seem, but instead were parlor-and-saloon songs, often in waltz time, based on sheet music published throughout the 19th century and then absorbed in the repertories of amateur Southern musicians.
- He reveals himself most plainly in the saloon songs, when it's just him and piano, as in his version of " One for My Baby, " from the brilliant 1962 " Sinatra and Sextet : Live in Paris ."
- Hayes's light baritone singing is relaxed, unmannered and marked by a perfect sense of rhythm which allowed him to attack phrases at just the perfect instant, and his renditions of classics from the twenties and of moralistic saloon songs such as " Ace in the Hole ", " Wise Guy " and " Silver Dollar " are splendid.
- There's wow factor, of course ( a galloping carousel is an early highlight ) though quieter scenes are realised with the same attention to detail, particularly the recreation of a Coney Island bar to frame Raoul's saloon song feature ( Why Does She Love Me ) and his face-off with Mr Y ( Devil Take the Hindmost ) An inspired, often ravishing production for sure, though of a sequel that doesn't make a strong enough musical or narrative argument for its own existence ."