The 60s hit 'a whiter shade of pale' by procul harum is based on Bach, I believe. I couldn't say what Bach other than Johann sebastien............
As a matter of fact the organ chords in the piece are indeed similar to Johann Sebastiaan Bach's Air on the G string.
A lot of world hits are using the chords of Pachelbel's Canon in D.
"A fifth of Beethoven" by Walter Murphy or "When I get you alone" by Robin Thicke.
de nederlandse band ekseption van rick van der linden
Robin Thicke's song When I Get You Alone uses a sample of Beethoven's work. There are surely many others who sampled his masterpieces as well.
Roll Over Beethoven by ELO
Thicke, "When I Get You Alone"
It was the first pop song to feature the sitar.
POP music is a generalized classification as it means Popular Music. Many songs are written to be"POP" songs but many songs on the POP charts have been "Cross Over Hits" from country, R&B and so on.
Yes they do sing pop songs
Country pop music started in the 1970's.
A list of new pop music songs can be found from many different resources. Music2Movies and PopDust are two websites that feature such lists, ordering them based on which were the best.
Thicke, "When I Get You Alone"
It was the first pop song to feature the sitar.
POP music is a generalized classification as it means Popular Music. Many songs are written to be"POP" songs but many songs on the POP charts have been "Cross Over Hits" from country, R&B and so on.
Yes they do sing pop songs
It is pop music. It is like pop music, although they have released a wide range of songs.
pop
Country pop music started in the 1970's.
Malay wedding music are mostly Malay pop songs
the answer is beethoven by the way i love you wikianswer bye bye byeBeethoven
no pop is not new music but new music does generally fall in to that catagory, pop is popular music, new music is made to suit the times so thats how it becomes popular, there is many new songs that arent popular.
Well it is when you have two types of music and you put them together which makes it a feature song.