Suchergebnisse
Suchergebnisse:
Her first live album since 1968's A Happening in Central Park, Barbra Streisand released her second one, Live Concert at the Forum, on October 1, 1972. [2] The album's songs were recorded during Streisand's segment of the Four for McGovern concert held on April 15, 1972, at The Forum indoor arena in Inglewood.
1981 — US. Vinyl —. LP, Album, Compilation, Stereo. Explore the tracklist, credits, statistics, and more for Live Concert At The Forum by Barbra Streisand. Compare versions and buy on Discogs.
- (245)
- Jazz, Rock, Pop
- 609
- Soft Rock, Ballad, Easy Listening
Live Concert at the Forum by Barbra Streisand released in 1972. Find album reviews, track lists, credits, awards and more at AllMusic.
- (43)
Live Concert At The Forum von Barbra Streisand bei Amazon Music - Amazon.de. Barbra Streisand. 11 SONGS • 41 MINUTEN • OCT 01 1972. Abspielen. SONGS. DETAILS. 1. Sing/Make Your Own Kind of Music. 04:20. 2. Starting Here, Starting Now (Album Version) 02:43. 3. Don't Rain On My Parade (Live Version) 02:39. 4. Monologue (Album Version) 03:09. 5.
Live Concert at the Forum was recorded live in Los Angeles at a fundraiser for George McGovern in 1972. On this page: track list, music credits, catalog numbers, purchase information, historical information about the recording of the album including recording session info, album art, singles released, outtakes from the album photo sessions.
Live Concert At The Forum. CD. Label: Sony, 1972. Bestellnummer: 9183777. Erscheinungstermin: 1.3.2008. *** digitally remastered. Tracklisting. Disk 1 von 1 (CD) 1. Sing/Make Your Own Kind If Music. 2. Starting Here, Starting Now. 3. Don't Rain On My Parade. 4. Monologue. 5. On A Clear Day (You Can See Forever) 6. Sweet Inspiration/Where You Lead.
The Forum in Inglewood, California, United States (on 1972-04-15) live medley including a cover recording of: Happy Days Are Here Again (Barbra Streisand version) (on 1972-04-15) lyricist: Jack Yellen (in 1929) additional writer: Ken Welch and Mitzie Welch composer: Milton Ager (in 1929) version of: Happy Days Are Here Again