"Magic" is a 1974 song by Scottish pop rock band Pilot, and was the first hit single for the group. It was written by band members David Paton and Billy Lyall for their debut album, From the Album of the Same Name.
According to Paton, the song is inspired by the sunrise on Blackford Hill in Edinburgh.[4] In a 2012 interview with Hotdisc Television, Paton also stated that at the time, his wife said she had "never seen a daybreak," which also inspired the song.[5]
Gomez's version was released as a single on 21 July 2009. It peaked at No. 61 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart, at No. 80 on the Canadian Hot 100 chart, at No. 5 on the Norwegian Singles Chart and at No. 90 on the UK Singles Chart. It has sold 563,000 copies in the United States.[22] Selena Gomez covered "Magic" for the soundtrack of the Disney Channel television series Wizards of Waverly Place; it was marked with an asterisk (*) as "Magic*" due to two other songs on the album having identical names (the other two performed by Meaghan Martin and Honor Society). The song was featured in the television film Wizards of Waverly Place: The Movie. Her music video premiered on Disney Channel on 24 July 2009. The video was directed by Roman Perez.
Did I seriously get Berenstain Bear'd by this freaking song? I probably thought it was by ELO for upwards of 15 years. Please tell me I'm not the only one who has had this realization because I feel like I am going crazy here.
Musically the song is a bit strange, with much of the song dominated by humorous sound effects and wavy keyboards. Graham however once again steals the show with some fantastic guitar playing, playing licks that somehow sound both fluid and surprisingly heavy at times.
Song Magic (詩魔法, utamahou?) is a form of magic that only Reyvateils can use, also known as "Imaginary Magic." When a Reyvateil wishes strong enough, the object of her imagination will become a physical object in reality.
Reyvateils are the ones who craft the magic, but the energy needed for the physical manifestation is received from the Tower. This means that Reyvateils are connected to the Tower when they sing a Song Magic.
When a Reyvateil sings, she first sends her Dynamic H-Waves from her Cosmosphere to the Song Server, using for this the direct connection they all have, known commonly as the Tower of Life. In response, the Server generates Dynamic D-Waves based on the feelings contained in the Dynamic H-Waves sent by the Reyvateil, and sends them back. In the most basic Song Magic, this is displayed as a large orb of energy, while in more advanced Songs, it can have more unique and special appearances, depending on the singer.[2] All of this is accompanied by the voice of the singing Reyvateil, and the instruments and choruses that compose the song according to what the Reyvateil imagines, which can be heard up to a few kilometers around the singer herself.[3][4]
Puff, the magic dragon lived by the sea
And frolicked in the autumn mist in a land called honah lee,
Little jackie paper loved that rascal puff,
And brought him strings and sealing wax and other fancy stuff. oh
Peter Yarrow wrote the song in 1958 before he joined the group. He wrote it after coming home and seeing a poem with words about the dragon. A few years later when this became a hit, Yarrow found Lipton and gave him half the songwriting credit. Lipton, who was a camp counselor when Yarrow found him, gets extensive royalties from this. Supposedly, Lipton based some of the words to his poem on an Ogden Nash poem called The Tale Of Custard The Dragon.
Puff, the magic dragon lived by the sea
And frolicked in the autumn mist in a land called honah lee,
Puff, the magic dragon lived by the sea
And frolicked in the autumn mist in a land called honah lee.
I've never used Magic Movie. However, I was thinking that maybe you could create an iPhone iMovie project, populate it with just the songs that you want to use in your Magic Movie, and then export the movie project as an audio-only sound track. That would merge all of the songs into one long soundtrack, that maybe you could import into your Magic Movie. Not sure it can be done, but might be worth a try if you haven't already got an answer elsewhere.
While this classification goes by the name of "Song Magic", the subspecies which are classified under this do not necessarily require the usage of the human vocal cords. However, they do require music and melody in some form in order to channel Eternano into waves to utilize their Magic. Despite the fact that these subspecies magic share this trait, they otherwise differ greatly between each other.Note Magic is, for instance, a heavily offensive Magic which unleashes notes with different effects, although primarily explosive ones. On the other side, there's Arc of Rhythm which can only inadvertently cause harm by manipulating magic and the environment. In between, there are quite a few variations, some which include singing and some which only utilize instruments.
In Magic Mike, a Tampa entrepreneur named Dallas (Matthew McConaughey) runs Xquisite Strip Club. His main attraction, Mike (Tatum), recruits local teenager Adam (Alex Pettyfer) and introduces him to an intoxicating lifestyle full of sex, drugs, and quick cash. It's also a film of contradictions as many of the home scenes are entirely quiet with Soderbergh focusing on the interior mindsets of his characters, rather than just their gyrating bodies. Yet at the same time, the film keeps a steady rhythm with over 30 songs featured over the 110-minute runtime. The primary conflict revolves around Dallas' domineering ways and Mike's promise to Adam's sister Brooke (Cody Horn) that he'll look after "The Kid." Now streaming on Netflix, Magic Mike co-stars Olivia Munn, Matt Bomer, Riley Keogh, Joe Manganiello, Adam Rodriguez, and Kevin Nash.
The Magic Mike soundtrack includes tracks with cheeky titles that align with many of the on-stage performance scenes. Soderbergh incorporates a couple of soft rock hits and even a classic country song from the early 2000s, but the majority of the film consists of hip-hop numbers and electro-themed tone-setters, with Ginuwine's "Pony" sitting as the crowning glory. Here's every featured song on the Magic Mike soundtrack.
Notes: words and music by Malvina Reynolds; copyright 1955 and 1958 Northern Music Corporation, renewed 1986. a.k.a. "Love Is Something." Despite the later copyright dates, this song was actually written while Malvina's daughter was at a junior high school dance, so around 1949.
Malvina Reynolds songbook(s) in which the music to this song appears:
---- Little Boxes and Other Handmade Songs
---- Cheerful Tunes for Lutes and Spoons: Youngish Songs
---- The Malvina Reynolds Songbook
---- There's Music in the Air: Songs for the Middle-Young
Other place(s) where the music to this song appears:
---- The Big Book of Children's Songs: Easy Guitar (Milwaukee: Hal Leonard, 1998)
---- Peter Blood and Annie Patterson: Rise Up Singing: The Group-Singing Song Book [lyrics & guitar chords only] (Bethlehem, PA: Sing Out Corp., 1992)
---- Peter and Annie Blood-Patterson: Winds of the People [lyrics & guitar chords only] (Sing Out, 1980?)
---- Peter Blood-Patterson: Rise Up Singing: The Group-Singing Song Book [lyrics & guitar chords only] (Bethlehem, PA: Sing Out Corp., 1988), p. 240
---- The Great Big Book of Children's Songs: Big-note Piano (Milwaukee: Hal Leonard, 1995)
---- The Great Big Book of Children's Songs: Piano, Vocal, Guitar (Milwaukee: Hal Leonard, 1995)
---- Larry Long: I Will Be Your Friend: Songs and Activities for Young Peacemakers (Montgomery, AL: Southern Poverty Law Center, 2003)
---- Michael David Mojcio et al.: Music in Motion (Los Alamitos, CA: Modern Signs Press, 1983)
---- Sing Out!, Volume 5(4) (1955), pp. 12-13
---- Tell Them I'm a Child of God: A Child's Celebration of the Family of God (Minneapolis: Augsburg Publishing, 1978)
---- Carl Visconti: Paint Creek Folklore Society Song Tune Book (Paint Creek, 1986)
Malvina Reynolds recording(s) on which this song is performed:
---- Malvina Reynolds Sings the Truth
---- Held Over
---- Ear to the Ground
---- Malvina Reynolds...Sings the Truth (2008)
---- listen to youtube.com video
---- listen to youtube.com video
First, let me explain what a songspell is: Instead of simply stating your intentions and incantations, you can add some umph to a spell by humming and singing your desires out loud. To really tap into song magic, you can even set the words to music and play it everyday as a personal reminder to stay on the magical path.
Dance Magic is a song featured in the Equestria Girls special of the same name. It first appeared as the fourth track on the soundtrack album My Little Pony Equestria Girls: Friendship Games - Original Motion Picture Soundtrack. Director Ishi Rudell initially stated on Twitter that the song is "unrelated" to My Little Pony Equestria Girls: Friendship Games.[1]
It originated as, well, just a feeling, during the team's success in the late 1970s. The term popped up again when the O's won it all in 1983, it was on fans' minds during Cal Ripken's famous streak and crowds at Camden Yards basked in it during three postseason appearances from 2012-16. And now, during some improbable, unexpected success in the midst of a rebuild in 2022, the magic seems to be back again.
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