Love Changes Everything (Sarah Brightman album)

Love Changes Everything - The Andrew Lloyd Webber Collection, Volume 2 (2005) is an album by English soprano Sarah Brightman. It contains songs from various shows for which Andrew Lloyd Webber wrote the music. The album contains eight previously released songs along with six new recordings.

Love Changes Everything
Studio album by
Released2005
GenreVocal, Musicals, Show Tunes
LabelReally Useful Records/Decca Broadway
ProducerAndrew Lloyd Webber, Nigel Wright, Mike Batt (track 10)
Sarah Brightman chronology
The Harem World Tour: Live from Las Vegas
(2004)
Love Changes Everything
(2005)
Diva: The Singles Collection
(2006)

The first song's title is rather "Probably On Thursday" - the title Brightman actually sings in the recording.

Track listing

  1. "Probably On a Thursday"
  2. "The Perfect Year"
  3. "Only You" (with Cliff Richard)
  4. "Love Changes Everything"
  5. "Seeing Is Believing " (with Michael Ball)
  6. "Think of Me" (with Steve Barton)
  7. "Any Dream Will Do"
  8. "I Don't Know How to Love Him"
  9. "Too Much in Love to Care" (with John Barrowman)
  10. "The Phantom of the Opera" (with Steve Harley)
  11. "Make Up My Heart"
  12. "Don't Cry for Me Argentina" (Spanish Version)
  13. "Everything's Alright" (with Gary Martin & Bogdan Kominowski)
  14. "Whistle Down the Wind" (piano with Andrew Lloyd Webber)

Weekly Charts

Charts Peak
Position
Japanese Albums (Oricon)[1] 245
US Top Classical Albums (Billboard)[2] 4
gollark: Libraries and stuff, perhaps.
gollark: CC has kind of ended up accidentally following the Unix thing of small simple tools, except often there are at least five copies of simple tools for no reason.
gollark: Yes, I suppose.
gollark: <@202992030685724675> Why would you expect anyone to want a licensed-use CC OS?
gollark: I already have full autocrafting worked out.

References

  1. サラ・ブライトマンのアルバム売り上げランキング [Sarah Brightman album sales ranking] (in Japanese). Oricon. Archived from the original on 22 October 2016. Retrieved 22 October 2016.
  2. "Sarah Brightman Chart History (Top Classical Albums)". Billboard. Retrieved 17 March 2016.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.