Sentences with Song, Sentences about Song in English

Sentences with Song, Sentences about Song in English

1. No song, no supper.

2. Sing a song with me.

3. I dislike this song.*

4. Let’s sing some songs.

5. Mary sang a beautiful song.

6. I dedicate this song to you.

7. My boyfriend loves this song.

8. Mary just sang a beautiful song.

9. A bird may be known by its song.

10. This song is very popular in Spain.

11. She has sung a song in the classroom.

12. This song reminds me of my childhood.

13. We generally sing songs all together.

14. He sang the song better than the others.

15. What’s your favorite TV show theme song?

16. What’s your favorite song to workout to?

17. The musician who wrote this song is French.

18. The large audience clapped at the end of the song.

19. Jackson asked the singer when he had sung his first song.

20. The songs of Opeth is darker than a neo-impressionist artist.

21. Yesterday my daughter sang very beautiful songs at the concert.

22. ‘Evil men have no songs.’ How is it that the Russians have songs?

23. Isabel usually sings the song but she was not singing this morning.

24. I don’t mean this in a stuck-up way, but I needed an attitude song.

25. The famous artist will be going on a tour worldwide to sing his songs.

26. Life is so short. I would rather sing one song than interpret the thousand.

27. Men, even when alone, lighten their labors by song, however rude it may be.

28. Of all the songs I’ve recorded, ‘Amarillo By Morning’ always sticks out in my mind.

29. What I like about music is the songs you can remember the lines of in a single second.

30. Had Elsa been listening to her songs until she realized that her songs need to improve?

31. I just can’t seem to write songs about peace and love. Yeah right, how do you get that?

32. Prince used to call me up 3am in the morning and invite me to hear some of his new songs.

33. If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.

34. It’s the best marriage of songs and production. But I have to say, I have an affinity for Bossanova.

35. If you’re horrible to me, I’m going to write a song about it, and you won’t like it. That’s how I operate.

36. I’m probably writing music now for the same reason as I started writing songs when I was 14 – to meet women.

37. Not only you, but also he is saying that no one likes this song. Is that true? I was broken when I heard this.

38. Jason had been playing the guitar and singing songs for ten years when Jason joined the competition and he won.

39. The great Gaels of Ireland are the men that God made mad, For all their wars are merry, and all their songs are sad.

40. You don’t love someone for their looks, or their clothes or their fancy car, but because they sing a song only you can hear.

41. When we find the natural rhythm and strike a perfect cord, we can sing our “own” song that will tune the signature of our life.

42. Music, at its essence, is what gives us memories. And the longer a song has existed in our lives, the more memories we have of it.

43. Great classic music that I’ve been turned on to has not only inspired and influenced me, but it has had an effect on my songwriting.

44. Peace Train is a song I wrote, the message of which continues to breeze thunderously through the hearts of millions of human beings.

45. I sure lost my musical direction in Hollywood. My songs were the same conveyer belt mass production, just like most of my movies were.

46. I woke up one morning with this song in my head, and the opening line of the song is, ‘My name was Richard Nixon, only now I’m a girl.’

47. I’d rather sing one wild song and burst my heart with it, than live a thousand years watching my digestion and being afraid of the wet.

48. Best of all is it to preserve everything in a pure, still heart, and let there be for every pulse a thanksgiving, and for every breath a song.

49. Walk on a rainbow trail walk on a trail of song, and all about you will be beauty. There is a way out of every dark mist, over a rainbow trail.

50. There’s something missing in the music industry today… and it’s music. Songs you hear don’t last, it’s just product fed to you by the industry.

51. Chelsea Morning is a great Joni Mitchell song and I guess I’m partial to her lyrics because they show me a slightly different perspective on life.

52. ‘Tis easy enough to be pleasant, When life flows along like a song But the man worth while is the one who will smile when everything goes dead wrong.

53. There’s a punk-rock attitude, clearly, to ‘Hated.’ There’s even a punk-rock attitude to ‘The Hangover,’ I think. We start the movie with a Glenn Danzig song.

54. One of the remarkable things about love is that, despite very irritating people writing poems and songs about how pleasant it is, it really is quite pleasant.

55. My mom and dad played this music all the time when I was growing up, so to me songs by Jerry Lee and Fats Domino are the classics, they’re the best songs ever.

56. Whether selling a new song, a new food, or a new crib, the lesson is the same: If you dress a new something in old habits, it’s easier for the public to accept it.

57. I think everybody can agree that you can hear a certain song and it will put you in a certain mood, and that’s just the beauty of music and I am so inspired by that.

58. I think that a song, when it works, never mind a piece of long form music, even a song is something that speaks to itself but has a language all of its own, ideally.

59. I went to Morocco, joined a band called Pegasus, ran out of money, went to Gibraltar and worked on the docks, writing songs about the sun and the morning and the birds.

60. I had no illusions about love anymore. It came, it went, it left casualties or it didn’t. People weren’t meant to be together forever, regardless of what the songs say.

61. I think the world is ready for some rock ‘n’ roll. Some real time guys that play their own instruments, write their own songs, and sing the music and have a good time doing it.

62. Some songs you get. Some songs you may not. And I think that’s the beauty of art: to question and to ask, to understand the deeper meaning after two or three or four listenings.

63. Our songs touch people, and take them back to a time when there was no threat of terrorism, when you didn’t have to lock your doors and when Mom and Dad took care of everything.

64. I always had a standard of, back when I was doing the country music I always told people I would never record a song that I wouldn’t sit down and sing in front of my mom and dad.

65. I like my name. My mom named me after a song by the 1970s group Bread. So, it’s meaningful, and I like the song. It’s a love song – kind of – but it’s kind of depressing and dark.

66. What is the price of experience? Do men buy it for a song? Or wisdom for a dance in the street? No, it is bought with the price of all the man hath, his house, his wife, his children.

67. I feel I want to grow as an actress and be better. I want to progress as a singer and songwriter, and produce movies and everything. So there’ll be no time when I feel I’ve done it all.

68. I don’t dream songs. I’m more apt to write dreams down and then to be able to interpret them into a song. I also tend to get up and write prose in the morning from which will come songs.

69. When I look at the majority of my own songs they really came from my own sense of personal confusion or need to express some pain or beauty – they were coming from a universal and personal place.

70. ‘Peace Train’ is a song I wrote, the message of which continues to breeze thunderously through the hearts of millions. There is a powerful need for people to feel that gust of hope rise up again.

71. Life, he realize, was much like a song. In the beginning there is mystery, in the end there is confirmation, but it’s in the middle where all the emotion resides to make the whole thing worthwhile.

72. There is more in you of good than you know, child of the kindly West. Some courage and some wisdom, blended in measure. If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.

73. Just this morning, out of a large memory for songs, and having been obsessed by them since childhood, suddenly, at the age of 84, I thought of a song I hadn’t thought of in over 50 years. It came into my head unbidden.

74. It was my 16th birthday – my mom and dad gave me my Goya classical guitar that day. I sat down, wrote this song, and I just knew that that was the only thing I could ever really do – write songs and sing them to people.

75. After a decade this glum, we deserved a shot of ‘Glee,’ a show that restored our faith in the power of song, the beauty of dance, and the magic of ‘spirit fingers’ to chase our cares and woes into somebody else’s backyard.

76. What I took back, because of my exposure to the Jewish music of the 30s and the 40s in my upbringing with my father, was that kind of theatrical songwriting. It was always a part of my character. This desire to make people laugh.

77. I’m not claiming divinity. I’ve never claimed purity of soul. I’ve never claimed to have the answers to life. I only put out songs and answer questions as honestly as I can… But I still believe in peace, love and understanding.

78. When I wrote the song, I had the sea near Bombay in mind. We stayed at a hotel by the sea, and the fishermen come up at five in the morning and they were all chanting. And we went on the beach and we got chased by a mad dog – big as a donkey.

79. I don’t know any other lifestyle. I get up in the morning and I really do feel that the world is my oyster, and I start that way, the same as I would if I were preparing to write a song: put a blank piece of paper up on the piano and you go for it.

80. I met Prince William at a musical festival and he let me know he was a fan of my music. But the invitation to sing at his wedding reception came completely out of the blue. The fact that Kate and William knew the words to my songs was very touching.

81. It was just like a dream. I could have ended up with an album that’s not all that different from anything else coming out of Nashville. Mutt made the difference. He took these songs, my attitude, my creativity, and colored them in a way that is unique.

82. My mom’s a concert pianist, so she started teaching me when I was around seven. When I was eight, I started writing my own songs, and kinda started putting piano and singing together. But I’m trained classically, which is a big influence on me, I think.

83. I was half asleep lying there writing this lyric in my head at about 3:30 in the morning. I woke Steve up with this idea and then we went into the living room where there was a little upright piano and finished the song. I wonder where that piano is now?

84. On ‘Van Halen,’ I was a young punk, and everything revolved around the fastest kid in town, gunslinger attitude. But I’d say that at the time of ‘Fair Warning,’ I started concentrating more on songwriting. But I guess in most people’s minds I’m just a gunslinger.

85. My mom played the recorder. But not having electricity, we had minimal exposure to music. As I got a little older, we had Walkmans and things that were battery-powered, but it would have been nice to be growing up in the iPod era. A tape only has six songs on a side.

86. And you have a record company behind it, this is a key too, you need people to fight for your records, at least a little bit. So if you have a great song, it’s catchy, and you’ve got a little bit of help, I think that’s all you need. But there hasn’t been that in music.

87. When I was younger, I was terrified to express anger because it would often kick-start a horrible reaction in the men in my life. So I bit my tongue. I was left to painstakingly deal with the aftermath of my avoidance later in life, in therapy or through the lyrics of my songs.

88. Sid Vicious began the age of participation in which everyone could be the artist. Sid proved that you don’t have to play well to be the star. You can play badly, or not even at all. I endorsed that attitude. If you can’t write songs, no problem – simply steal one and change it to your taste.

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