At end of episode there's more than a minute of the song, but heard as background while characters are speaking in foreground - if listening REALLY closely there are addition lyrics such as "I'll always regret - the things that were said - I'll never forget - that we were to wed - I dream of you always - but my dreams don't come true - forever remembering you - (male chorus) - remembering you - & on & on. It's on YouTube by uploader FILMRISE, & this partial even has the words close-capt'd onscreen. There's a partial clip of song at beginning of episode as opening credits roll up on dark screen, lasting about 40+ seconds, with male chorus singing "Remembering you - remembering you - remembering you - remembering you - (female lead comes in) "Your photograph - pinned to the wall - the letters you wrote - I kept them all - I dream of you always - but my dreams don't come true - forever remembering you - (male chorus again) "remembering you - remembering you" - trails off as screen comes up & storyline begins. Episode title is "How Will They Remember Me?"
Want to know the group/singer of a song I heard partially on "Wiseguy" TV program, Season 3, Episode 6. This was probably for an adult a deep love song (?)Īny ideas, how ever crazy, accepted! more » The lyrics and vibe were, to a child, something maybe you are in your bed and you'll come somewhere with me on a boat/in a dream/in a world and it will be great, but then it's over and back you go and now, morning, you're sad. I THINK it is the last track on an otherwise folk/pop album, where everything has been somewhat upbeat on that side but the closer is a lush downer. So, an album from (broadly) 1965-73? Male vocalist, deep, but not ridiculously so, voice. Glen Campbell? Tom Jones? My parents weren't from the US or really into music so there is a limited roster here. My quick and not complete research into Val's albums doesnt turn up a contender, so I'm thinking him, or Roger Whittaker, or music like that. There was another song in my "play the entire album side" routine that I found slightly. When I was a unsupervised early 70s kid I'd play my parents' LPs and one of the memories I recently thought of was the Val Doonican song "Elusive Butterflies of Love".