“BACKTRACKS HITS” HOLIDAY RESORT AND SPA GUAM 881 Pale San - TopicsExpress



          

“BACKTRACKS HITS” HOLIDAY RESORT AND SPA GUAM 881 Pale San Vitores Rd, Tumon GU 96913, Guam 671-645-3413/14 “KENTOS GUAM” Great Ambiance, diff. LIVE Bands from Weds/Thurs/Fri/Sat Drinks Specials All Night Long```` For Parties & Fund Raisers, Call them at #922-1234 Located at HYATT REGENCY GUAM in Tumon This Saturday is “LATIN NIGHT” with Caliente. & NO COVER CHARGE! Wed/Thurs - Anak Band Fri – Prominence with DJ Love Sat – Caliente with Dj Klept 1. Almaz is a single by American female soul singer Randy Crawford. A heartfelt piano ballad, it signalled a comeback for the artist, who reached the top five in the UK singles chart with the song. Almaz is one of the few songs Randy Crawford has written by herself, and the first of her own compositions that was released as a single. Composition Almaz was written about a couple of Ethiopian refugees who were neighbours of Crawfords. The man asked Crawford to write a song about his wife, who was named Almaz (which means diamond in Amharic, Arabic and a number of other languages). In the song, the singer reflects on their rare form of love. In Crawfords own words, I witnessed this perfect love affair between them, although she was considerably younger than him. This beautiful couple with their baby. As refugees they were looking for a world where love survives.[1] 2. I Still Believe is a pop-ballad song written and composed by Antonina Armato and Giuseppe Cantarelli, and originally recorded by pop singerBrenda K. Starr. It is a ballad in which the singer is confident she and her former boyfriend will never be together again, but still believes that some day it may happen. It was covered by American singer Mariah Carey, who was a backup singer on Starrs original version, and cantopopsinger Sandy Lam. The song was based on a real life relationship of one of its songwriters, Antonia Armato: Armatos former boyfriend had proposed to her, but she felt that the timing was not right. He was not pleased, and pushed her into an ultimatum: to get married or break up. Even though Armato loved her boyfriend at the time, she stuck to her convictions and the couple broke up. To deal with her emotional pain, Armato wrote the song. Brenda K. Starrs original version[edit] Brenda K. Starr recorded the song for her self-titled second album, which Eumir Deodato produced; it is considered her signature song. It was released as the second single from Starrs debut album in 1988, and peaked at number 13 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100, becoming Starrs first and only top twenty single on the Hot 100. Its music video comprises scenes of Starr singing the song in a warehouse intercut with scenes of her walking past many romantic couples. The song was also recorded in Spanish as Yo Creo En Ti which was released as a single. In 1998, she recorded a salsa version of the song on her album No Lo Voy a Olvidar, as I Still Believe/Creo en Ti. This version peaked at #20 on the Billboard Latin Tropical Airplay chart.[1]
Posted on: Thu, 11 Dec 2014 01:03:23 +0000

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