Ebay has one as does amazon.
believe, two voices one song, were gonna find it,connected
"One Foot In Front of the Other" by Bone Symphony
The number one song of November, 1961, is called "Big Bad John" by Jimmy Dean. It is sorted into the country category. (Meaning I will never listen to it)
Brian Mcknight - You're The Only One For Me
Jupiter, Symphony No.41
Three of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's symphonies are No. 25, No. 29, and his final one, No. 41, or the Jupiter Symphony.
Mozart has had many amazing symphonies. such as his last and most famous one #41 aka Jupiter.
just one, Symphony No.9
Charles Ives wrote four numbered symphonies, and two more, one titled A Symphony: New England Holidays; the other was Universe Symphony, which remained unfinished.
One cannot categorize something as subjective as music into subsections of best and worst. However, Symphony 94 (aka surprise symphony) is looked fondly upon as are all 12 of the London Symphonies and the Paris Symphonies to a lesser extent. For significant Sturm un Drang influences, Symphonies 44 and 45 are excellent. And of course, Haydn's final masterpiece, Symphony 104 is highly regarded as one of his best.
No, that would be Haydn. It's formal name is the Symphony No. 94 in G Major, one of the twelve "London Symphonies".
Most symphonies have four movements, although composers are free to give their symphonies as many or as few movements as they like. The classical symphony as perfected by Haydn and Mozart almost without exception consisted of four movements. Beethoven connected the third and fourth movements of his 5th Symphony. Since that time it has varied more. For instance, Samuel Barber's first symphony is in one continuous movement with four differing sections. Cesar Franck's is probably the most famous three-movement symphony.
The Suprise Symphony is Franz Joseph Haydn's Symphony No. 94. The famous "Suprise!" part is the second movement, but like all symphonies it has four movements in all.
It's the one by the same composer that was published immediately following the publication of his Symphony #49. Very few composers ever wrote that many symphonies.
There are actually a few London symphonies, Vaughan Williams wrote one and Haydn also had a set of twelve symphonies called London symphonies, though his symphony No. 104 is particularly known as the London symphony.
He is most definitly known as the Composer of "The New World Symphony." The symphony is composed of 4 movements. It is, in my opinion, one of the best symphonies ever written! I love the first and 4th movements which are the only two usually played. :) I hope I helped.