Something for Everybody is an album released by Baz Luhrmann in 1998. It contains new ambient versions (either newly recorded or remixed) of music from his films and plays, including hits from William Shakespeare's Romeo + Juliet, Strictly Ballroom and La bohème. The most popular single from the album is the spoken word song "Everybody's Free (To Wear Sunscreen)".
Something for Everybody is an album released by Baz Luhrmann in 1998. A few songs sound a little. The following lists the top 100 albums of 1997 in Australia from the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) End of Year Albums Chart. Peak chart positions from 1997 are from the ARIA Charts, overall position on the End of Year Chart is calculated by ARIA based on the number of weeks and position that the records reach within the Top 50 albums for each week during 1997. Something for Everybody (disambiguation). Something for Everybody is a 1961 album by Elvis Presley. Something for Everybody may also refer to
Baz Luhrmann is a triple threat. The man can write and direct trend-setting films like "Moulin Rouge" and "Strictly Ballroom" stage amazing theatrical works of art (La Boheme) and even adapt a college graduation speech into a doozy-rap single featured here. He can literally invent "Something for Everybody" and this collection of familiar tunes is more than a novelty act - it works as a fascinating, percolating fusion of styles and genres
Single by Baz Luhrmann. from the album Something for Everybody. The essay was used in its entirety by Australian film director Baz Luhrmann on his 1998 album Something for Everybody, as "Everybody's Free (To Wear Sunscreen)". It was released in some territories in 1997, with the speech (including its opening words, "Ladies and Gentlemen of the Class of '97") completely intact.
Features Song Lyrics for Baz Luhrmann's Something For Everybody album. 1. Aquarius/Let The Sunshine In Lyrics. 2. Perhaps Perhaps Perhaps Lyrics. Baz Luhrmann Lyrics provided by SongLyrics. Lyricapsule: The Surfaris Drop ‘Wipe Out’; June 22, 1963. RIFF’d: Nas’ ‘Nasir’. Lyricapsule: The Byrds Drop ‘Mr. Tambourine Man’; June 21, 1965.
Something For Everybody. EZELL: I am in exactly no ways familiar with Something for Everybody, and now that I do know what it is my initial surprise at the thought of an album made by Luhrmann has evaporated. If one were to imagine a record made by the gaudy auteur behind Moulin Rouge and the confectionery sweet 2013 adaptation of The Great Gatsby, of course it would sound like Something for Everybody. When it comes to the two types of anniversary thinkpiece you identify - either putting a classic in a new light or re-introducing a lost album - Something for Everybody clearly occupies the latter space
Album: Something For Everybody (1998). Charted: 1 45. Get the Sheet Music License This Song. The vocals were by Australian voice-over artist Lee Perry. This samples Quindon Tarver's gospel remake of the Rozalla hit "Everybody's Free (To Feel Good)," from the soundtrack to the 1996 Romeo & Juliet film, which was directed by Baz Luhrmann