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  1. After you've gone and left me crying After you've gone, there's no denying You'll feel blue, you'll feel sad You'll miss the dearest pal you've ever had. There'll come a time, now don't forget it There'll come a time, when you'll regret it Some day when you'll grow lonely Your heart will break like mine and you'll want me only After you've gone, after you've gone away

  2. After You've Gone est une chanson composée par Turner Layton avec des paroles de Henry Creamer, sortie en 1918.D'un tempo modéré et influencée par le blues et le jazz, la chanson possède la particularité d'avoir pour l'époque un refrain tenant sur 20 mesures et non 32. Les paroles traitent du fait de se retrouver seul et se démarquent de la mélodie plus légère du titre.

  3. In this clip from the 1934 movie Sadie McKee, Gene Austin and his combo, featuring Gene Austin (piano), Candy Candido (bass), and Otto Heimel (guitar), perform "After You've Gone" for Sadie (Joan Crawford), a working girl who has been picked up by a besotted millionaire, Jack Brennan (Edward Arnold).The other man at the table is the millionaire's attorney (Franchot Tone) who has been in love ...

  4. 5 de feb. de 2023 · Frank Sinatra and Quincy Jones' version of 'After You've Gone', performed live at FreudThis jazz standard was composed by Turner Layton in 1918, with lyrics ...

  5. 16 de ene. de 2018 · E7 Am E7 Am But know it's ve - ry strange D G D7 G6 That you should e - ver change C D9 G6 Sometimes I think someone has won your heart C C7 F tempted you away F#dim C A7 But let me warn you, though we're miles apart D9 G9 C C7 You'll regret it some day [Chorus 2] Fmaj7 Fmmaj7 After you've gone, after the break up Cmaj7 A5 After you've gone ...

  6. After You've Gone: Created by Fred Barron. With Nicholas Lyndhurst, Celia Imrie, Ryan Sampson, Dani Harmer. The daily lives of Jimmy, his two kids and his mother in law whilst his wife is in Africa.

  7. It's now almost 70 years since Al Jolson has been gone - but his legacy remains with us. His phrasing and emphasis in this 1918 classic is (for me) unmatcha...