Not familiar with this as a song title. Maria ( not the West Side Story song) is one of the livelier songs of the play. not aware of a song with the title you mention, maybe it is a line in a song like ( How do you solve a problem like Maria?) sounds vaguely religious.
Together, Richard Rodgers wrote the music and Oscar Hammerstein II wrote the lyrics for all of the songs in "The Sound of Music" except for 'I Have Confidence' and 'Something Good', music and lyrics by Richard Rodgers.
The Sound of Music grossed $286,214,286 worldwide.
Here is a complete list (in no particular order) of the songs in the movie 'The Sound of Music', music by Richard Rodgers and lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II for all songs except 'I Have Confidence' and 'Something Good', music and lyrics by Richard Rodgers.PreludeThe Sound of MusicDo-Re-MiMy Favorite ThingsI Have ConfidencePreludium (Dixit Dominus)Morning HymnAlleluiaMariaSixteen Going on SeventeenThe Lonely GoathersEdelweissSo Long, FarewellHow Can Love SurviveClimb Ev'ry MountainSomething GoodProcessional
music and lyrics = song music and no lyrics = music
Richard Rodgers wrote the music and Oscar Hammerstein II wrote the lyrics to the Broadway musical "The Sound of Music" in 1959. It became an Oscar-winning movie in 1965.
Together, Richard Rodgers wrote the music and Oscar Hammerstein II wrote the lyrics for all of the songs in "The Sound of Music" except for 'I Have Confidence' and 'Something Good', music and lyrics by Richard Rodgers.
The Sound of Music grossed $286,214,286 worldwide.
In music, the lyrics and music can be registered separately or together, and sound recordings have their own rights.
only music without lyrics
Here is a complete list (in no particular order) of the songs in the movie 'The Sound of Music', music by Richard Rodgers and lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II for all songs except 'I Have Confidence' and 'Something Good', music and lyrics by Richard Rodgers.PreludeThe Sound of MusicDo-Re-MiMy Favorite ThingsI Have ConfidencePreludium (Dixit Dominus)Morning HymnAlleluiaMariaSixteen Going on SeventeenThe Lonely GoathersEdelweissSo Long, FarewellHow Can Love SurviveClimb Ev'ry MountainSomething GoodProcessional
If you mean "whats the diff". "lyrics" are words that people sing and "music" is another word for tune or really another word for any sound in general.
The Sound of Music.
music and lyrics = song music and no lyrics = music
Richard Rodgers wrote the music and Oscar Hammerstein II wrote the lyrics to the Broadway musical "The Sound of Music" in 1959. It became an Oscar-winning movie in 1965.
I would say that the background music, like the beat and the music, is so repetitive. Most of their songs sound the same music wise. Just listen to their songs without the lyrics. Forget they are singing and concentrate on the music. Most of their songs sound the same. They're nice because the lyrics and messages are different but the songs all sound the same. I'm a huge Jonas Brothers fan though.
Climb Every Mountain
its neither. its called My Favorite Things