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  1. You'll Never Walk Alone is een lied geschreven door Richard Rodgers en Oscar Hammerstein II voor de musical Carousel (1945). Het nummer is meermaals opgenomen door verschillende artiesten, waarvan de versie van Gerry & the Pacemakers waarschijnlijk de bekendste is. Deze versie is beïnvloed door de versie van Gene Vincent .

  2. Listen to "You'll Never Walk Alone" here: https://lnk.to/YNWAstrLIKE if you shed a tear listening to this ultimate football anthem! "The video is fitting wit...

    • 3 min
    • 78.6M
    • Gerry Pacemakers
  3. When you walk through a storm Keep your chin up high And don’t be afraid of the dark. At the end of the storm Is a golden sky And the sweet, silver song of a lark. Walk on through the wind, Walk on through the rain, Though your dreams be tossed and blown. Walk on, walk on, with hope in your heart, And you’ll never walk alone! You’ll never ...

  4. 7 de ene. de 2021 · It’s one many have heard before. MUSIC: “You’ll Never Walk Alone,” Kiri Te Kanawa, The Mormon Tabernacle Choir. Meridee Duddleston: It was April, 1945 – less than a month before Nazi Germany’s surrender, in a country yearning for hope. In the dark days of World War II, Rogers and Hammerstein’s Carousel premiered on Broadway and ...

  5. 22 de mar. de 2022 · You'll never walk alone : ... You'll never walk alone : the official illustrated history of Liverpool FC by Kelly, Stephen F., 1946-Publication date 1988

  6. 14 de ene. de 2018 · After Gerry and the Pacemakers’ “You’ll Never Walk Alone” dropped out of the top 10, the fans kept singing it and adopted it as the unofficial club anthem. In 1964 the Liverpool team sang it alongside Gerry and the Pacemakers on The Ed Sullivan Show , and the following year the club’s manager Bill Shankly included the song among his Desert Island Discs on the BBC radio show.

  7. This Rogers & Hammerstein song was originally written for the 1945 musical Carousel. It was sung in the original show by Christine Johnson. Frank Sinatra was the first artist to take this song into the charts (#9 on the Billboard charts in 1945). It soon became very popular as many who had lost loved ones during the war took solace in the lyrics.