Piano Sheets > Carol Connors Sheet Music > Someone's Waiting For You (ver. 1) Piano Sheet

Someone's Waiting For You (ver. 1) by Carol Connors - Piano Sheets and Free Sheet Music

  
About the Song
How to read free sheet music effectively If you are starting out learning how to play piano one of the first things is to learn how to read sheet music for piano. This includes usage of various concepts like treble clefs, bass clefs, key signature and ability to understand actual music notes. The two clefs When it comes to piano notes there are two kinds of clefs. Every clef will have a different note in the space and line. The notes typically begin from A and end with G and repeating the pattern again. Starting a piano sheet from C would then take you to D and then E. when it comes to reading sheet music it takes a little more practice and patience. You would need to memorize the music notes through acronyms to make it easier.  (More...)    Download this sheet!
About the Artist
Carol Connors (born Annette Kleinbard, November 13, 1940, New Brunswick, New Jersey) is a retired American singer-songwriter. She was the lead singer of the pop vocal trio known as The Teddy Bears, which also included Phil Spector. The Teddy Bears' only major hit, "To Know Him Is To Love Him", which Spector wrote specifically to showcase Connors' singing voice, reached #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 in late 1958. The trio disbanded because of the failure of their follow-up singles, and the fact that Spector preferred working behind the scenes to performing. Some years later she legally changed her name to Carol Connors. She co-wrote (with Ayn Robbins and Bill Conti) "Gonna Fly Now", the theme song from the film, Rocky, which earned her an Academy Award nomination. Carol Connors sang the theme to the cult film, Orca, called "We are One".
Random article
How to read free sheet music effectively If you are starting out learning how to play piano one of the first things is to learn how to read sheet music for piano. This includes usage of various concepts like treble clefs, bass clefs, key signature and ability to understand actual music notes. The two clefs When it comes to piano notes there are two kinds of clefs. Every clef will have a different note in the space and line. The notes typically begin from A and end with G and repeating the pattern again. Starting a piano sheet from C would then take you to D and then E. when it comes to reading sheet music it takes a little more practice and patience. You would need to memorize the music notes through acronyms to make it easier.  (More...)