"At Last" is a 1941 song written by Mack Gordon and Harry Warren for the musical film Orchestra Wives, starring George Montgomery and Ann Rutherford. It was first performed in the film and on record by Glenn Miller and his orchestra, vocal by Ray Eberle and Pat Friday. The song was a major hit for Miller, reaching number 14 on the Billboard pop charts in 1942, and it soon became a standard. Nat King Cole recorded it in 1957 on his number one album Love Is the Thing. In 1960, it was covered by blues singer Etta James in a performance that improvised on Warren's melody. James' version was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1999.[1] (SOURCE: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/At_Last)
The song has been covered a zillion times although I'm partial to Ella Fitzgerald's version.
Claudio Monteverdi
How about Vivaldi?
No composer's dying last words were these. Many believe it to be Beethoven, but a consultation of the major reference work on Last Words. Last Words of Notable People by William B. Brahms clearly discredits this.
composer
his father wanted him to become a composer...
Claudio Monteverdi
The last name of composer Alexander Tcherepnin is pronounced "CHAIR-ep-neen".
How about Vivaldi?
He was a great composer. He played his last symphony when deaf.
No composer's dying last words were these. Many believe it to be Beethoven, but a consultation of the major reference work on Last Words. Last Words of Notable People by William B. Brahms clearly discredits this.
Mozart was a composer, not a writer. His last known piece he wrote was Symphony No. 41.
His last name was Handel (HEN-del). His full name is George Frideric Handel.
There are two Holst or Malher.
Sounds like the composer Craig Armstrong.
Filo is a French composer whose last name starts with F.
Maurice Duruflé's last name is pronounced "doo-ROO-flay."
composer