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Flashdance What A Feeling with Irene Cara

Flashdance What A Feeling Piano Chords

Flashdance What A Feeling with Irene Cara Piano Chord Tabs by Rockmaster

Play piano accompaniment for Flashdance What A Feeling with Irene Cara Piano Chord Tabs by Rockmaster

 

Flashdance What A Feeling Piano Chords and Tabs

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Irene Cara

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Flashdance What A Feeling

Listen and play along

Irene Cara

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Pop Songs

Rockmaster Songbook

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Circle Of Fifths Chord Changing Method

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia 

Flashdance… What a Feeling” was performed by Irene Cara, who also sang the title song for the similar 1980 film Fame. The music for “Flashdance… What a Feeling” was composed by Giorgio Moroder, and the lyrics were written by Cara and Keith Forsey. The song won an Academy Award for Best Original Song, as well as a Golden Globe and numerous other awards. It also reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100 in May 1983. Despite the song’s title, the word “Flashdance” itself is not heard in the lyrics. The song is used in the opening title sequence of the film, and is the music Alex uses in her dance audition routine at the end of the film.

Another song used in the film, “Maniac“, was also nominated for an Academy Award. It was written by Michael Sembello and Dennis Matkosky. A popular urban legend holds that the song was originally written for the 1980 horror film Maniac, and that lyrics about a killer on the loose were rewritten so the song could be used in Flashdance. The legend is discredited in the special features of the film’s DVD release, which reveal that the song was written for the film, although only two complete lyrics (“Just a steel town girl on a Saturday night” and “She’s a maniac”) were available when filming commenced. Like the title song, it reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100 in September 1983.[6][7]

Other songs in the film include “Lady, Lady, Lady”, performed by Joe Esposito, “Gloria” and “Imagination” performed by Laura Branigan, and “I’ll Be Here Where the Heart Is”, performed by Kim Carnes.

The soundtrack album of Flashdance sold 700,000 copies during its first two weeks on sale and has gone on to sell over 6,000,000 copies in the US alone. In 1984, the album won the Grammy Award for Best Album of Original Score Written for A Motion Picture or a Television Special.

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