CAN’T HELP FALLING IN LOVE WITH YOU
ANGELINA JORDAN
SONGWRITERS: GEORGE DAVID WEISS; LUIGI CREATORE & HUGO PERETTI
COUNTRY: NORWAY
ALBUM: IT’S MAGIC
LABEL: DISCOGS
GENRE: ROCKABILLY
YEAR: 2018

Angelina Jordan (born Angelina Jordan Astar on 10 January 2006) is a Norwegian child singer whose audition for the 2014 season of Norway's Got Talent at the age of seven, singing "Gloomy Sunday" in the style of Billie Holiday, became a viral video online, and led to worldwide press coverage. She went on to win the competition (at eight) with her performance of George Gershwin's "Summertime". Since then she has worked to raise millions of dollars on behalf of environmental causes and children's charities around the world. She always performs barefoot, after befriending a young shoeless girl while traveling when she was six years old. Jordan wrote a book about the experience and became the youngest published author in Norway.
Jordan has released multiple digital singles, two EPs, and one album called It's Magic. She appeared on the first season of Little Big Shots in 2016, and the second season of America's Got Talent: The Champions in 2020.
In August 2020, her manager (her uncle, Michael Astar) announced that she has signed with Republic Records.
After Jordan's performances on Norway's Got Talent went viral online, she was featured in Time, Daily Mirror, People, and other news outlets around the world. She also realized a personal ambition by performing for Peace Prize recipients Malala Yousafzai and Kailash Satyarthi at the 2014 Nobel Peace Prize Concert.
In September 2014, she performed "Fly Me to the Moon" on the US television show The View, bringing her wider fame in the United States. She also performed on several TV 2 programs in Norway over the next few years, including multiple appearances on Allsang på Grensen (Singalong at the Border, referring to the border fortress of Fredriksten where outdoor concerts are held) and on TV4 in Sweden.
Jordan had a small guest role in the final episode of the Netflix series Lilyhammer, playing a girl who sings in a bar.
In April 2016, she performed "Fly Me to the Moon" on the first season of the noncompetitive children's talent show Little Big Shots. A year later she performed "What a Difference a Day Makes" on the UK version of the show.
In December 2016, she performed on Alan Walker is Heading Home, a live concert broadcast from Bergen, Norway, where she sang Walker's songs "Sing Me to Sleep" and "Faded".
On 27 June 2018, Jordan performed "Fly Me to the Moon" for Quincy Jones in The O2 Arena in London, as part of his 85th birthday celebration, and also joined with other singers to perform "Man in the Mirror" to close the show.
In 2019, Jordan performed for former presidente Barack Obama and other public figures at the Brilliant Minds conference in Stockholm.
In 2020, she competed in the second season of America's Got Talent: The Champions. Her first appearance on the show, singing an original arrangement of Queen's "Bohemian Rhapsody", received a "golden buzzer" from judge Heidi Klum (meaning that Jordan would pass directly into the finals). As with her Norway's Got Talent audition six years earlier, a video of Jordan's performance began to go viral, quickly reaching 10 million views on YouTube. The performance also garnered praise from Queen's official Twitter account. Shortly afterwards, the video was taken downand Jordan released a studio version of the same arrangement under her own copyright. Jordan's second performance (in the finals), a similarly reworked "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road", was also well received, but she did not make the top 5.
"Can't Help Falling in Love" is a song recorded by American singer Elvis Presley for the album Blue Hawaii (1961). It was written by Hugo Peretti, Luigi Creatore, and George David Weiss and published by Gladys Music, Inc. The melody is based on "Plaisir d'amour", a popular French love song composed in 1784 by Jean-Paul-Égide Martini. The song was initially written for a woman as "Can't Help Falling in Love with Him", which explains the first and third line ending on "in" and "sin" rather than words rhyming with "you".
"Can't Help Falling in Love" was featured in Presley's 1961 film Blue Hawaii. During the following four decades, it has been recorded by numerous other artists, including Bob Dylan on his 1973 album Dylan, Tom Smothers, Swedish pop group A-Teens, and the British reggae group UB40, whose 1993 version topped the U.S. and UK charts.

NOTE: I RECEIVED THE INDICATION, ABOUT THIS SMALL GREAT SINGER ANGELINA JORDAN, FROM MY COUSIN ISABEL SANTOS. THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR YOUR SUGGESTION, FANTASTIC. HERE IT IS!!!
Wise men say
Only fools rush in
But I can't help
Falling in love with you

Shall I stay?
Would it be a sin
If I can't help
Falling in love with you?

Like a river flows
Surely to the sea
Darling, so it goes
Some things are meant to be

Take my hand
Take my whole life too
For I can't help
Falling in love with you

Like a river flows
Surely to the sea
Darling, so it goes
Some things are meant to be

Take my hand
Take my whole life too
For I can't help
Falling in love with you

For I can't help
Falling in love with you.
SABRA DÍOS
MANOELA TORRES y TRIO LOS PANCHOS
COMPOSITOR: ALVARO CARRILLO
PAIS: HISPANO-AMERICANA
ALBUM: HOMENAJE A LOS PANCHOS
DISCOGRÁFICA: IM DISCOS
GÉNERO: RANCHERA
AÑO: 2007

Los Panchos (conocidos también como Trío Los Panchos) es un trío musical romántico mexicano y puertorriqueño de fama internacional formado en la década de 1940. Los boleros fueron su principal género musical. El Trío Los Panchos ha vendido 500 millones de discos desde su fundación.
El Trío Los Panchos se formó en la ciudad de Nueva York en 1944, donde los mexicanos Alfredo Bojalil Gil, más conocido como El Güero Gil, y José de Jesús Navarro Moreno, más conocido como Chucho Navarro, junto al puertorriqueño Herminio Avilés Negrón, de nombre artístico Hernando Avilés, decidieron unir sus talentos e innovar el género de los tríos cantando a tres voces y tres guitarras. Tiempo más tarde, Avilés y Navarro tocaban la guitarra y Gil el requinto. Se iniciaron en el ambiente artístico el 14 de mayo de 1944 al presentarse en el Hispanic Theatre de Nueva York interpretando música ranchera mexicana con gran éxito, lo que pronto los llevó a grabar su primer disco, para el sello Coda, titulado Mexicantos, con siete temas de música mexicana y el bolero «Hasta mañana», el mismo que les abrió las puertas hacia este género musical con el cual se los identifica en todo el mundo.
Los Panchos ganaron fama internacional con sus boleros románticos, especialmente em América Latina, donde en el comienzo de la segunda parte del siglo XX seguían siendo honrados como uno de los tríos más famosos de todos los tiempos. Vendieron millones de copias de sus discos de 78 RPM y álbumes LP a unos pocos años de su fundación.
Las compañías discográficas SEECO y CBS Columbia (hoy parte del consorcio Sony BMG) les dieron a firmar contratos con los que forjaron su trayectoria. En la década de 1940 ya habían colaborado en América con la CBS Orquesta Viva América (Alfredo Antonini - Director de orquesta) con el acordeonista John Serry Sr. en un álbum discográfico para Pilotone Records.
Manoella Torres (Nueva York, 21 de abril de 1954), conocida internacionalmente como "La mujer que nació para cantar", es una popular cantante y actriz estadounidense, de ascendencia puertorriqueña, radicada en México y que, hasta la fecha, no se ha naturalizado mexicana. Es reconocida por canciones románticas y sugerentes como Ahora que soy libre, Te voy a enseñar a querer, Libre como gaviota y A la que vive contigo, entre muchas otras. Ha realizado treinta y dos producciones discográficas y ha incursionado en diversos géneros musicales a lo largo de sus cuarenta y siete años de carrera artística (contados a partir del 4 de febrero de 1972). Comparada con Céline Dion por la crítica especializada, ha grabado más de trescientas cincuenta canciones de famosos compositores: Armando Manzanero, Juan Carlos Calderón, Alejandro Jaén, Juan Gabriel, Manuel Alejandro y Rafael Pérez Botija, por mencionar sólo algunos.
Tanto tiempo disfrutamos de este amor
Nuestras almas se acercaron tanto así
Que yo guardo tu sabor
Pero tú llevas también, sabor a mí

Si negaras mi presencia en tu vivir
Bastaría con abrazarte y conversar
Tanta vida yo te di
Que por fuerza tienes ya, sabor a mí

No pretendo ser tu dueño
No soy nada, yo no tengo vanidad
De mi vida, doy lo bueno
Soy tan pobre, qué otra cosa puedo dar

Pasarán más de mil años, muchos más
Yo no sé si tenga amor, la eternidad
Pero allá tal como aquí
En la boca llevarás, sabor a mí

No pretendo ser tu dueño
No soy nada, yo no tengo vanidad
De mi vida, doy lo bueno
Soy tan pobre, qué otra cosa puedo dar

Pasarán más de mil años, muchos más
Yo no sé si tenga amor, la eternidad
Pero allá tal como aquí
En la boca llevarás, sabor a mí.
HOLD ME TILL THE MORNING COMES
PAUL ANKA & PETER CETERA
SONGWRITERS: DAVID FOSTER & NÂDIYA ZIGHEM
COUNTRY: U. S. A.
ALBUM: WALK A FINE LINE
LABEL: COLUMBIA RECORDS
GENRE: SOFT ROCK
YEAR: 1983

Paul Albert Anka OC (born July 30, 1941) is a Canadian-American singer, songwriter and actor. Anka became famous with hit songs like "Diana", "Lonely Boy", "Put Your Head on My Shoulder", and "(You're) Having My Baby". He wrote such well-known music as the theme for The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson and one of Tom Jones's biggest hits, "She's a Lady". He also wrote the English lyrics to Claude François and Jacques Revaux's music for Frank Sinatra's signature song, "My Way", which has been recorded by many, including Elvis Presley.
In 1983, he co-wrote the song "I Never Heard" with Michael Jackson. It was retitled and released in 2009, under the title "This Is It". An additional song that Jackson co-wrote with Anka from the 1983 session, "Love Never Felt So Good", was released in 2014 on Jackson's posthumous album Xscape. The song was also released by Johnny Mathis in 1984.
Peter Paul Cetera (/səˈtɛrə/ sə-TERR-ə; born September 13, 1944) is an American retired singer, songwriter, and bassist best known for being an original member of the rock band Chicago (1967–1985), before launching a successful solo career. His career as a recording artist encompasses 17 albums with Chicago and eight solo albums.
With "If You Leave Me Now", a song written and sung by Cetera on the group's tenth album, Chicago garnered its first Grammy Award. It was also the group's first number one single.
As a solo artist, Cetera has scored six Top 40 singles, including two that reached number one on Billboard's Hot 100 chart in 1986, "Glory of Love" and "The Next Time I Fall". "Glory of Love", the theme song from the film The Karate Kid Part II (1986), was co-written by Cetera, David Foster, and Diane Nini, and was nominated for both an Academy Award and a Golden Globe Award for best original song from a motion picture. In 1987, Cetera received an ASCAP award for "Glory of Love" in the category, "Most Performed Songs from Motion Pictures". His performance on "Glory of Love" was nominated for a Grammy Award for best pop male vocal. That same year Cetera and Amy Grant, who duetted on "The Next Time I Fall", were nominated for a Grammy Award for best vocal performance by a pop duo or group.
Besides David Foster and Amy Grant, Cetera has collaborated throughout his career with other nationally known and internationally known recording artists from various genres of music including: The Beach Boys, Billy Joel, Karen Carpenter, Paul Anka, Agnetha Fältskog, Richard Sterban, Bonnie Raitt, Madonna, David Gilmour, Az Yet, Cher, Chaka Khan, Crystal Bernard, Ronna Reeves, and Alison Krauss. His songs have been featured in soundtracks for movies and television.
In 2014, Chicago's first album, Chicago Transit Authority (Columbia, 1969), featuring Cetera on bass and vocals, was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame. Cetera was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of Chicago in April 2016, and he, Robert Lamm, and James Pankow are among the 2017 Songwriters Hall of Fame inductees for their songwriting efforts as members of the group.
"Hold Me 'Til the Morning Comes" is a song by Paul Anka, featuring backing vocals by former Chicago singer Peter Cetera. It was co-written by Anka with David Foster. It was the first release and only hit from his LP, Walk a Fine Line.
The song describes a man who is in a relationship that's dying, yet both are afraid to walk away from it. He struggles with ambivalent feelings, however, still longs to hold on to the love they have shared.
The song scratched the Top 40 on the Billboard Hot 100, peaking only at number 40. It spent four months on the chart, longer than almost all of Anka's other hits, including some of his highest-charting songs. This was his last (and final Top 40 hit) of 53 charting pop singles in the US to date. The song also spent three weeks at number two on the US Adult Contemporary chart. It was blocked from the number-one spot first by DeBarge's "All This Love" and then by Rita Coolidge's "All Time High".
In Canada, the song failed to enter the pop singles chart, however, reached number one on the Adult Contemporary chart in August 1983.
"Hold Me 'Til the Morning Comes" was included on Anka's collaborative LP, A Body of Work.
Two broken hearts
Neither one knows what to say
Both falling from love
But not quite all the way
Look at us now
Reachin' back for yesterday
Wanting to know
If the other wants to stay
After all
I'm the one who said we're through
Now I can't live without you, anymore
Out there lost
Is a dream that can come true
Is it worth the reachin' for?
Don't you need me anymore?

Darlin'
Hold me till the mornin' comes
Until I see you smile
Take all the sadness from your eyes
Hold me till the mornin' sun
Let me stay we've just begun
Ooh, stay with you

Where shall we start?
A tender word that we can share
And if we believe
In time we will get there
Look at us now
Wanting more than words can say
Both falling in love
But this time all the way
Out there lost
Are the words: I still love you
Are they worth the reachin' for?
Do you love me anymore?

Darlin'
Hold me till the mornin' comes
Until I see you smile
Take all the sadness from your eyes (no more)
Hold me till the mornin' sun
Let me stay, we've just begun
I want to stay with you

Hold me till the mornin' comes
Until I see you smile
Take all the sadness from your eyes (no more, no)
Hold me till the mornin' sun
Let me stay, we've just begun
I want to stay with you

Would you love me in the mornin'? (Would you love me?)
Will you still be there in the mornin'? (Would you love me?)
Or would you leave without a warnin'?
Say you love me too (say you stay)

Would you love me in the mornin'? (Would you love me?)
Will you still be there in the mornin'? (Would you love me?)
Or would you leave without a warnin'? (Don't go away)
Say you love me too.
HAVE I TOLD YOU LATELY THAT I LOVE YOU?
RICKI NELSON
SONGWRITER: VAN MORRISON
COUNTRY: U. S. A.
ALBUM: RICKY
LABEL: IMPERIAL RECORDS
GENRE: POP ROCK
YEAR: 1957

Ricky is the debut album by American actor and rock and roll musician Ricky Nelson, released in November 1957. Much of the album is in the pop-rock genre, focusing mostly on standards. The album topped the Billboard's Top LPs.
Eric Hilliard Nelson (May 8, 1940 – December 31, 1985), known professionally as Ricky Nelson until his 21st birthday when he officially dropped the "y" and simply became Rick Nelson, was an American rock & roll star, pop pioneer, musician, and singer-songwriter. From age eight he starred alongside his family in the radio and television series The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet. In 1957 he began a long and successful career as a popular recording artist. As one of the top "teen idols" of the 1950s his fame led to a motion picture role co-starring alongside John Wayne and Dean Martin in Howard Hawks's western feature film Rio Bravo (1959). He placed 53 songs on the Billboard Hot 100, and its predecessors, between 1957 and 1973, including "Poor Little Fool" in 1958, which was the first number 1 song on Billboard magazine's then-newly created Hot 100 chart. He recorded 19 additional Top 10 hits and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on January 21, 1987. In 1996 Nelson was ranked No. 49 on TV Guide's 50 Greatest TV Stars of All Time.
Nelson began his entertainment career in 1949 playing himself in the radio sitcom series The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet. In 1952, he appeared in his first feature film, Here Come the Nelsons. In 1957, he recorded his first single, debuted as a singer on the television version of the sitcom, and released the Nº. 1 album titled Ricky. In 1958, Nelson released his first #1 single, "Poor Little Fool", and in 1959 received a Golden Globe nomination for "Most Promising Male Newcomer" after starring in Rio Bravo. A few films followed, and when the television series was cancelled in 1966, Nelson made occasional appearances as a guest star on various television programs.
Have I told you lately that I love you?
(words & music by Scott Wiseman)
Have I told you lately that I love you?
Could I tell you once again somehow?
Have I told with all my heart and soul how I adore you?
Well darling I'm telling you now
Have I told you lately when I'm sleeping
Every dream I dream is you somehow?
Have I told you why the nights are long
When you're not with me?
Well darling I'm telling you now
My heart would break in two if I should lose you
I'm no good without you anyhow
And have I told you lately that I love you
Well darling I'm telling you now
My heart would break in two if I should lose you
I'm no good without you anyhow
And have I told you lately that I love you
Well darling I'm telling you now.