This page lists notable US and UK albums, singles and compilations which feature music written by Andrew Lloyd Webber , alongside their release dates.
Album Title | Principal Artists | Album Details |
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The Likes of Us: Live from the Sydmonton Festival | Concert performance featuring Adam Brazier, Hannah Waddingham and Tim Rice |
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Album Title | Principal Artists | Album Details |
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Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat | Original album featuring David Daltrey and The Mixed Bag |
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Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat: Original London Cast | Recording of the Young Vic production including Peter Reeves and Gary Bond |
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Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat | A studio production featuring Gary Bond, Peter Reeves and Gordon Waller |
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Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat: Original Broadway Cast | Featuring Laurie Beechman, Bill Hutton & Gordon Stanley |
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Andrew Lloyd Webber's New Production of Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat | Featuring the cast of the London Palladium revival production including Jason Donovan, Linzi Hateley and David Easter |
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Andrew Lloyd Webber's New Production of Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat: Original Canadian Cast Recording | Featuring Donny Osmond, Janet Metz and Johnny Seaton |
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Andrew Lloyd Webber's New Production of Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat: U.S. Cast | Featuring the cast of the 1993 Los Angeles production including Michael Damian, Kelli Rabke, Clifford David and Robert Torti |
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Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat: Original Soundtrack Album | Featuring the cast of the video production including Donny Osmond, Maria Friedman, Robert Torti and Richard Attenborough |
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Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat | US Tour Cast Recording featuring Patrick Cassidy and Amy Adams |
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Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat | UK Tour Cast Recording featuring Craig Chalmers, Abigail Jaye, Henry Metcalfe and Simon Bowman |
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Album Title | Principal Artists | Album Details |
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Jesus Christ Superstar | Ian Gillan, Murray Head and Yvonne Elliman |
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Jesus Christ Superstar: A Decca Broadway Original Cast Album | Original Broadway Cast including Jeff Fenholt, Ben Vereen and Yvonne Elliman |
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Jesus Christ Superstar: Original London Cast | Original London Cast including Paul Nicholas, Stephen Tate and Dana Gillespie |
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Jesus Christ Superstar: Original Australian Cast Recording | Original Australian Cast including Trevor White, Jon English and Michele Fawdon |
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Jesus Christ Superstar: The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack Album | Ted Neely, Yvonne Elliman and Carl Anderson |
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Jesucristo Superstar: Original versión española | Producción Nacho Artime y Jaime Azpilicueta. Featuring Camilo Sesto (Jesús), Ángela Carrasco (María Magdalena) & Teddy Bautista (Júdas) |
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Jesus Christ Superstar: The Album - 1992 Australian Cast Recording Highlights | John Farnham, Jon Stevens, Kate Ceberano |
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Jesus Christ Superstar: The 20th Anniversary London Cast Recording | Paul Nicholas, Keith Burns and Claire Moore |
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Jesus Christ Superstar: The Album - New Zealand Cast Recording Highlights | Darryl Lovegrove, Jay Laga'aia and Margaret Urlich |
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Jesus Christ Superstar | Featuring the Jay Records studio cast including Dave Willetts, Clive Rowe and Issy van Randwyck |
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Jesus Christ Superstar | 1996 London Cast including Steve Balsamo, Joanna Ampil & Zubin Varla |
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Highlights from Jesus Christ Superstar |
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Jesus Christ Superstar: A New Stage Production Soundtrack | Video cast including Glenn Carter, Jérôme Pradon and Renee Castle |
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Jesus Christ Superstar Live in Concert | NBC broadcast cast including John Legend, Sara Bareilles, Brandon Victor Dixon and Alice Cooper |
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Album Title | Principal Artists | Album Details |
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Jeeves: Original London Cast | Original London Cast including David Hemmings and Michael Aldridge |
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By Jeeves: Original Cast Recording | Original London Cast including Steven Pacey and Malcolm Sinclair |
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By Jeeves: American Premier Recording | Video production cast including John Scherer and Martin Jarvis |
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Album Title | Principal Artists | Album Details | Notes |
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Evita: An Opera Based on the Life Story of Eva Perón 1919 - 1952 | Julie Covington, C. T. Wilkinson, Paul Jones and Barbara Dickson |
| A 1996 digital remaster was released on double CD as the 20th Anniversary Edition with a silver jewel case. |
Evita: Original London Cast Recording | Original London Cast including Elaine Paige, David Essex, Joss Ackland and Siobhan McCarthy |
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Evita: Premiere American Recording | Original Broadway Cast including Patti LuPone, Mandy Patinkin and Bob Gunton |
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Evita | International Tour Cast including Florence Lacey, James Sbano and Robert Alton |
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Evita: The Complete Motion Picture Soundtrack | Soundtrack of the film featuring Madonna, Antonio Banderas, Jonathan Pryce and Jimmy Nail |
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Evita: Music from the Motion Picture |
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Evita: 2006 London Cast Recording | 2006 London Cast including Elena Roger, Matt Rawle and Philip Quast |
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Evita: New Broadway Cast Recording | 2012 Broadway Cast including Ricky Martin, Elena Roger and Michael Cerveris |
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Album Title | Artist | Album Details |
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Tell Me on a Sunday | Marti Webb |
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Andrew Lloyd Webber and Don Black's Tell Me on a Sunday | Denise Van Outen |
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Album Title | Principal Artists | Album Details |
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Cats: Original Cast Recording | Original London Cast including Elaine Paige, Brian Blessed, Sarah Brightman and Paul Nicholas |
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Highlights from Cats |
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Cats: Complete Original Broadway Cast Recording | Original Broadway Cast including Betty Buckley, Ken Page, Harry Groener & Terrance Mann |
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Cats: Selections from the Original Broadway Cast Recording |
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Cats: Original Australian Cast Recording | Original Australian Cast including Debbie Byrne, John Wood & Grant Smith |
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Cats: Highlights from the Motion Picture Soundtrack | Film adaptation cast including James Corden, Judi Dench, Jason Derulo, Jennifer Hudson, Ian McKellen and Taylor Swift |
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Album Title | Principal Artists | Album Details |
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Song & Dance: Original Cast Recording | Original London Cast: Marti Webb and Wayne Sleep |
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Song & Dance | Video cast: Sarah Brightman and Wayne Sleep |
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Song & Dance: The Songs | Original Broadway Cast: Bernadette Peters |
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Album Title | Principal Artists | Album Details |
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Starlight Express: The Original Cast Recording | Original London Cast including Lon Satton as Papa, Ray Shell as Rusty and Stephanie Lawrence as Pearl |
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Music and Songs from Starlight Express |
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Starlight Express | Touring cast |
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The New Starlight Express | 1992 revised London production cast including Lon Satton as Papa, Greg Ellis as Rusty and Reva Rice as Pearl |
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Album Title | Principal Artists | Album Details |
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The Phantom of the Opera: Original Cast Recording | Original London Cast including Michael Crawford, Sarah Brightman and Steve Barton |
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Highlights from Andrew Lloyd Webber's The Phantom of the Opera: Original Canadian Cast | Original Toronto Cast including Colm Wilkinson, Rebecca Caine and Byron Nease |
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The Phantom of the Opera: The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack | Single disc album featuring the cast of the movie including Gerard Butler as The Phantom, Emmy Rossum as Christine and Patrick Wilson as Raoul |
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The Phantom of the Opera: The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack - Special Edition | Double album featuring the cast of the movie including Gerard Butler as The Phantom, Emmy Rossum as Christine and Patrick Wilson as Raoul |
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The Phantom of the Opera at the Royal Albert Hall | Live recording of a concert to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the London opening featuring Ramin Karimloo, Sierra Boggess and Hadley Fraser |
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Album Title | Principal Artists | Album Details |
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Aspects of Love: Original Cast Recording | Original London Cast including Ann Crumb, Michael Ball, Diana Morrison and Kevin Colson |
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Album Title | Principal Artists | Album Details | Notes |
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Sunset Boulevard: World Premiere Recording | Original London cast including Patti LuPone, Kevin Anderson, Daniel Benzali and Meredith Braun |
| A number of the backing tracks had been pre-recorded for the 1992 Sydmonton Festival performance and therefore differed from the versions as they would have been played live at the theatre. |
Sunset Boulevard: American Premiere Recording | Original Los Angeles cast including Glenn Close, Alan Campbell, George Hearn and Judy Kuhn |
| Close, Campbell and Hearn would later reprise their roles when the show opened on Broadway and therefore this functioned as the Broadway cast recording despite not having technically been so. |
Sunset Boulevard: American Premiere Recording Highlights |
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Sunset Boulevard: Original Canadian Cast Recording | Toronto cast including Diahann Carroll, Rex Smith and Walter Charles |
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New Ways to Dream: Songs from Sunset Boulevard | Betty Buckley |
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Sunset Boulevard: Deutsche Originalaufnahme | Original German Cast including Helen Schneider and Uwe Kröger |
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Songs from Sunset Boulevard | Petula Clark |
| A three-track EP released to coincide with Clark taking over the role in the London production |
Songs from Andrew Lloyd Webber's Sunset Boulevard | Faith Brown & Earl Carpenter |
| A three-track EP released for sale at venues of the first UK touring production. Brown and Carpenter performed to the backing tracks that had been originally recorded in advance of Sunset Boulevard: World Premiere Recording. David Caddick, the show's Production Musical Director produced the vocal performances. |
Album Title | Principal Artists | Album Details | Notes |
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Songs from Whistle Down the Wind | Tom Jones, Tina Arena, Boyzone, Elaine Paige, Donny Osmond, The Everly Brothers, Meat Loaf, Boy George, Sounds of Blackness, Bonnie Tyler, Michael Ball and Lottie Mayor |
| A studio recording of songs from the show made to promote the original London production. |
Whistle Down the Wind: Original Cast Recording | Original London cast including Marcus Lovett, Lottie Mayor and James Graeme |
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Album Title | Principal Artists | Album Details |
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The Beautiful Game: Original Cast Recording | Original London Cast including Josie Walker, Hannah Waddingham and Ben Goddard |
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Album Title | Principal Artists | Album Details | Notes |
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The Woman in White: Original Cast Recording | Original London Cast including Martin Crewes, Maria Friedman and Michael Crawford |
| Mostly recorded live with some re-recording and overdubs. |
Album Title | Principal Artists | Album Details | Notes |
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Andrew Lloyd Webber's Love Never Dies | Ramin Karimloo, Sierra Boggess and Joseph Millson |
| A concept album recorded prior to the original London production. |
Andrew Lloyd Webber's Love Never Dies | Ben Lewis and Anna O'Byrne |
| A studio production |
Album Title | Principal Artists | Album Details |
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The Wizard of Oz: 2011 London Palladium Recording | Original London Cast including Danielle Hope, Hannah Waddingham and Michael Crawford |
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Album Title | Principal Artists | Album Details |
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Stephen Ward: Original Cast Recording | Original London Cast including Alexander Hanson, Charlotte Spencer and Charlotte Blackledge |
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Album Title | Principal Artists | Album Details |
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School of Rock: Original Cast Recording | Original Broadway Cast including Alex Brightman and Sierra Boggess |
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Album Title | Principal Artists | Album Details |
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Cinderella | Original London Cast starring Carrie Hope Fletcher |
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Album Title | Artist | Album Details | Notes |
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Variations | Andrew Lloyd Webber |
| Variations on a theme by Niccolo Paganini for cello and rock band, featuring Julian Lloyd Webber, Barbara Thompson, Rod Argent and Colosseum II featuring Gary Moore. Lloyd Webber wrote and arranged the music, as well as producing the album. |
Won't Change Places | Marti Webb |
| Lloyd Webber was the Executive Producer as well as writing and producing a number of the tracks. |
Requiem | Andrew Lloyd Webber |
| Lloyd Webber's setting of the Latin requiem mass featuring vocalists Plácido Domingo and Sarah Brightman, and conducted by Lorin Maazel. Lloyd Webber wrote the music. |
Surrender: The Unexpected Songs | Sarah Brightman |
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Album Title | Artists | Album Details | Notes |
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Andrew Lloyd Webber - Masterpiece |
| A live recording of a concert at the Great Hall Of The People, Beijing, featuring Elaine Paige, Kris Phillips, Tony Vincent and Sandy Lam |
Title | B-Side | Artist | Year | Label | Notes |
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"Down Thru' Summer" | "I'll Give All My Love to Southend" | Ross Hannaman | 1967 | Columbia | |
"1969" | "Probably On Thursday" | ||||
"Believe Me I Will" | Sacha Distel | 1968 | |||
"'Til Tomorrow" | "Try It and See" | Rita Pavone | 1969 | "Try It and See" written by Lloyd Webber and Rice | |
"Come Back Richard Your Country Needs You" | Tim Rice and the Webber Group | ||||
"Goodbye Seattle" | "Wait for Me" | Paul Raven now known as Gary Glitter | 1970 | MCA Records | Produced by Mike Leander, Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber. The B-side was written by Leander. |
"What A Line to Go Out On" | "Interlude for Johnny" | Yvonne Elliman | 1972 | Polydor | Produced by Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber. The B-side was written by Elliman. Both tracks were taken from her album Yvonne Elliman , released in the UK and Japan as I Don't Know How to Love Him. |
"Disillusion Me" | Gary Bond | 1973 | |||
"Christmas Dream" | "Marisa" | Maynard Williams | 1974 | MCA Records | |
"Christmas Dream" | "Lonely Without You" | Maynard Williams | |||
"Don't Cry for Me Argentina" | "Rainbow High" | Julie Covington | 1977 | MCA Records | Taken from the album Evita: An Opera Based on the Life Story of Eva Perón 1919 - 1952 |
"Another Suitcase in Another Hall" | "Requiem for Evita" | Barbara Dickson | |||
"Magdalena" | "Half A Moment" | Tony Christie featuring Dana Gillespie | "Magdalena" was written by Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice. "Half A Moment" was a song from Lloyd Webber's 1974 production Jeeves with lyrics by Alan Ayckbourn. | ||
"On This Night of a Thousand Stars" | "Bewitched" | Tony Christie | The A-side was written and produced by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice, with orchestration by Lloyd Webber. The B-side was written by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart, arranged by Ian Green and produced by Ray Singer. | ||
"Take That Look Off Your Face" | "Sheldon Bloom" | Marti Webb | 1980 | Really Useful Records, Polydor | Music by Andrew Lloyd Webber and lyrics by Don Black. Produced by Andrew Lloyd Webber. Taken from Webb's album Tell Me on a Sunday. |
"Tell Me on a Sunday" | "You Made Me Think You Were in Love" | ||||
"Your Ears Should Be Burning Now" | "Nothing Like You've Ever Known" | A-side written by Don Black and Tony MacAulay, and produced by MacAulay with executive production by Lloyd Webber. B-side by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Don Black, with arrangement and production by Lloyd Webber. The A-side was taken from Webb's album Won't Change Places and the B-side from her previous album Tell Me on a Sunday. | |||
"I've Been in Love Too Long" | "I Won't Change Places" | Music by Andrew Lloyd Webber and lyrics by Don Black. Produced by Andrew Lloyd Webber. A-side arranged by Lloyd Webber. B-side arranged by Lloyd Webber and David Cullen. Taken from Webb's album Won't Change Places. | |||
"Unexpected Song" | "Angry and Sore" | Marti Webb and Justin Hayward | 1981 | A-side written by Lloyd Webber and Don Black, and produced by Lloyd Webber. B-side written and produced by Rod Argent, and taken from the album Won't Change Places | |
"Memory - Theme from the musical Cats" | "The Lost Variation" | Andrew Lloyd Webber | MCA Records | ||
"Memory" | "The Overture from Cats" | Elaine Paige | Really Useful Records, Polydor | Music by Andrew Lloyd Webber and lyrics by Trevor Nunn after T. S. Eliot. Taken from the album Cats: Original Cast Recording | |
"Memory" | "Evergreen (Love Theme From A Star Is Born)" | Barbra Streisand | 1982 | Columbia | |
"The Last Man in My Life" | "Come Back With the Same Look in Your Eyes" | Marti Webb | Polydor | ||
"The Phantom of the Opera" | "Overture - The Phantom of the Opera" | Steve Harley and Sarah Brightman | 1986 | ||
"The Music of the Night" | "Wishing You Were Somehow Here Again" | Michael Crawford, Sarah Brightman | Double A-Side | ||
"All I Ask of You" | "The Phantom of the Opera Overture - Act II" | Cliff Richard and Sarah Brightman | |||
"Love Changes Everything" | "Aspects of Aspects" | Michael Ball | 1989 | ||
"Anything But Lonely" | "Half a Moment" "What Makes Him Love Me?" "English Girls" | Sarah Brightman | |||
"The First Man You Remember" |
| Michael Ball and Diana Morrison | |||
"Any Dream Will Do" | Jason Donovan | 1991 | |||
"Close Every Door" | Phillip Schofield | 1992 | |||
"Amigos Para Siempre (Friends for Life)" |
| José Carreras and Sarah Brightman | |||
"Tetris" | "Play Game Boy" | Doctor Spin | Polydor, Carpet Records | Arranged by Lloyd Webber with Nigel Wright, collaborating under the name Doctor Spin | |
"Next Time You Fall in Love" | "Make Up My Heart" | Reva Rice and Greg Ellis | 1993 | Polydor | |
"Sunset Boulevard" | "Sunset Boulevard Symphonic Mix" | Michael Ball | |||
"The Perfect Year" | Dina Carroll | A&M Records | |||
"With One Look" | "Memory" | Barbra Streisand | Columbia | ||
"As If We Never Said Goodbye" | "Guilty" | 1994 | |||
"As If We Never Said Goodbye" |
| Elaine Paige | 1995 | WEA | |
"Don't Cry for Me Argentina" |
| Madonna | 1996 | Warner Bros. Records, WEA | Co-produced by Lloyd Webber, Wright, Alan Parker and David Caddick |
"You Must Love Me" | "Rainbow High" | ||||
"Another Suitcase in Another Hall" |
| 1997 | |||
"Whistle Down the Wind" |
| Tina Arena | 1998 | Really Useful Records, Polydor |
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"No Matter What" |
| Boyzone | Polydor | ||
"No Matter What" | "She's the One" | ||||
"A Kiss is a Terrible Thing to Waste" |
| Meat Loaf | Virgin | ||
"Memory" |
| Elaine Paige | WEA |
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"Our Kind of Love" |
| Hannah | 2000 | Really Useful Records, Telstar Records |
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"Our Kind of Love" - Nowels and Judge Mix | "Our Kind of Love" - Acoustic Version "Viva! The Beautiful Game" | Really Useful Records, Telstar Records | |||
"Let Us Love in Peace" | Josie Walker with the Omagh Community Youth Choir | ||||
"Any Dream Will Do" |
| Lee Mead | 2007 | Really Useful Records, Polydor, Fascination | |
"It's My Time" | Jade Ewen | 2009 | Polydor | Eurovision Song Contest 2009 entry for the UK | |
"Sing" | Gary Barlow | 2012 | Decca | Official song for the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II which was co-written with Gary Barlow, and performed with the Commonwealth Band and the Military Wives | |
"Beautiful Ghosts" | Taylor Swift | 2019 | Polydor | Original song for the film adaptation of Cats |
Title | Artist | Album | Year | Label | Notes |
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"It's Easy for You" | Elvis Presley | Moody Blue | 1977 | RCA Records | The final track on Presley's final album. |
"I Could Have Given You More" | Petula Clark | Don't Cry for Me Argentina: The CBS Years, Vol 2 | |||
"Cold" | The Everly Brothers | Songs from Whistle Down the Wind | 1998 | Polydor |
Lloyd Webber's Really Useful Records which, for a number of years, had an exclusive partnership with Polydor, released a number of compilations:
Other notable compilation albums, produced by other labels, include:
Sarah Brightman is an English classical crossover soprano singer, actress, and dancer.
Steps are a British dance-pop group consisting of Lee Latchford-Evans, Claire Richards, Lisa Scott-Lee, Faye Tozer and Ian "H" Watkins. Steps were formed in May 1997 and achieved two number-one albums in the UK, 14 consecutive UK top-5 singles including two number ones, and a string of hits across Europe. The group has sold over 22 million records worldwide in addition to acquiring a BRIT Award nomination in 1999 for Best Newcomer while supporting Britney Spears on tour the same year. When Richards and Watkins departed to form a recording duo, the group disbanded on 26 December 2001. Their penultimate single reached number five in the UK charts while their final album of greatest hits, Gold (2001), was the group's second number-one album in the UK.
Sade are an English band, formed in London in 1982 and named after their lead singer, Sade Adu. Three members, Paul Anthony Cooke, Stuart Mathewman, and Paul Spencer Denman, were originally from Hull in the East Riding of Yorkshire. Its music features elements of soul, quiet storm, smooth jazz and sophisti-pop. All of the band's albums, including compilations and a live album, have charted in the US Top Ten.
Platinum & Gold Collection, released in 2004, is the second greatest hits compilation by Toni Braxton, following Ultimate Toni Braxton released in 2003. It is a budget CD with fewer songs than Ultimate, but it has the remix versions of some songs. Although the album was not given a proper release in the United States and is considered an international release, it has sold 281,518 copies in the US as of February 2012.
Gold: Greatest Hits is the first greatest hits album released by British pop group Steps. It was released in 2001 and reached number one on the UK Albums Chart. The lead single from the album was "Chain Reaction", a cover of the Diana Ross hit; the Steps' version reached number 2 in the UK Singles chart and was the group's highest selling single since "Say You'll Be Mine/Better The Devil You Know". The second single from the album, the slow ballad "Words Are Not Enough", was released with a cover of "I Know Him So Well", from ABBAmania. The single was notably Steps' first single to have an accompanying video that was almost fully animated and did not feature a dance routine like their video for "Heartbeat". The single reached number 5 in the UK charts and was their lowest-selling single to date. A release for "Baby Don't Dance" was planned for 2002 but was scrapped due to the group's split although promotional copies surfaced before the release of The Last Dance.
"You Must Love Me" is a song recorded by American singer and songwriter Madonna. It was written by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice, for the 1996 film adaptation of the musical, Evita, based on the life of Argentinian leader Eva Perón. The song was released on October 21, 1996, by Warner Bros. as the lead single from the film's soundtrack. After years of not working together due to their individual projects, Lloyd Webber and Rice collaborated on creating a new track for the film, with the hopes of obtaining an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Song. According to Lloyd Webber, the song's purpose was to showcase Perón's emotional state at the time as well as her relationship with her husband Juan Perón.
American hard rock band Kiss has released twenty studio albums, thirteen live albums, and sixty singles. The group, formed in New York City in 1973, first consisted of bassist Gene Simmons, rhythm guitarist Paul Stanley, lead guitarist Ace Frehley, and drummer Peter Criss. It is the most recognizable and successful line-up, which lasted until Criss' departure in 1980. The band is known for its make-up and on-stage antics, which influenced many artists who later used similar effects in their concerts.
The discography for American country music singer Garth Brooks consists of 16 studio albums, two live albums and 51 singles. He has sold estimated over 170 million records worldwide, making him one of the best-selling music artists in history. According to RIAA, Brooks is the top-selling solo artist of all time with 157 million certified albums in the US. American Music Awards honored him the "Artist of the 90s Decade" and iHeartRadio Music Awards also honored him the "Artist of the Decade".
John Ford is a British musician. He relocated to the United States in the mid-1980s and now resides on the North Shore of Long Island, New York.
"The Phantom of the Opera" is a song from the 1986 stage musical of the same name. It was composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber, with lyrics written by Charles Hart and Richard Stilgoe, and additional lyrics by Mike Batt. The song was originally recorded by Sarah Brightman and Steve Harley, which became a UK hit single in 1986, prior to the musical. In its theatrical debut, it was sung by Brightman and Michael Crawford in their roles as Christine Daaé and the Phantom.
The Best of OMD is a compilation album by English electronic band Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark (OMD), released in 1988; marking a decade since the band's beginnings. The record essentially delineates the group's experimental early years from their pop-oriented later work: side one features recordings from 1979 to 1984, while side two is drawn from the group's 1984–1988 efforts.
The following is a comprehensive discography of the Stranglers, an English rock band.
This is the discography of Scottish singer, songwriter and guitarist Donovan.
The discography of Faith No More, an American rock group, consists of seven studio albums, nineteen singles, one live album, five compilations, four video albums.
Greatest Hits is a compilation album by Welsh singer Bonnie Tyler. It was released on 14 September 2001 by Sanctuary Records. The album features Tyler's major career hits and one of her latest recordings from the time, "Tyre Tracks and Broken Hearts".
Vangelis was a Greek musician, composer, and producer. He began his music career in the 1960s with the Greek progressive rock band Aphrodite's Child and in the 1970s began composing electronic music. He gained wide mainstream popularity after composing soundtracks to film Chariots of Fire (1981) and Blade Runner (1982). His solo career discography consists of 23 studio albums, 26 compilation albums, 12 soundtrack albums, and roughly 29 singles. The majority of his film, documentary, theatre, and ballet & dance scores weren't released or officially released. He also collaborated with Jon Anderson and as a duo Jon and Vangelis released 4 studio albums, 2 compilations, and 13 singles, and with Irene Papas released two studio albums.
During his career as a singer and composer, Pat Boone released 63 singles in the United States, mostly during the 1950s and early 1960s when Boone was a successful pop singer and, for a time, the second-biggest charting artist behind Elvis Presley according to Billboard. Boone has had over 25 singles reach the top 20 on the U.S. singles charts, including the number-one hits "Ain't That a Shame" (1955), "I Almost Lost My Mind" (1956), "Don't Forbid Me" (1957), "Love Letters in the Sand" (1957), "April Love" (1957), and "Moody River" (1961). "I'll Be Home" (1956) reached No. 1 in the UK. He set a Billboard record, which he still holds, for spending 220 consecutive weeks on the charts with one or more songs each week.
Definitive INXS is a compilation of Australian rock band INXS released in 2002. It has almost the same track listing as The Best of INXS. The compilation features most of their hit singles, as well as two previously unreleased tracks, "Salvation Jane" and "Tight". "Salvation Jane" is an outtake taken from the X sessions in 1990. The 2002 remaster of X features the song's original demo. "Tight" was written by songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Andrew Farriss and recorded by the band during the sessions for Welcome to Wherever You Are in 1992. The song was reworked by the remaining members of INXS in 2002 after the death of vocalist Michael Hutchence in 1997. The compilation also features a cover of Steppenwolf's "Born to Be Wild", which was specially recorded for the April 1993 launch of Virgin Radio in the UK and was first included on the Japanese release of Full Moon, Dirty Hearts.
The discography of Smash Mouth, an American rock band, consists of seven studio albums, four compilation albums, 19 singles and 13 music videos. Their first studio album, Fush Yu Mang, was released in 1997. It peaked at number 19 in the US and was certified platinum two times by the RIAA. A single from the album, "Walkin' on the Sun", peaked at number 1 on the US Adult Top 40 and Alternative Songs charts and at number 3 in Canada. In 1999, Smash Mouth released their second studio album, Astro Lounge. Helped by the singles "Can't Get Enough of You Baby", "All Star", and "Then the Morning Comes", the album peaked at number 6 in the US and was certified platinum three times by the RIAA. "All Star" peaked at number 1 on the US Adult Top 40 chart and also reached the top five on the US Billboard Hot 100, US Alternative Songs, Australia, and Canada charts. "Then the Morning Comes" peaked at number 2 on the US Adult Top 40 and Canada charts.
"Love Changes Everything" is a song from the musical Aspects of Love, composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber, with a lyric written by Charles Hart and Don Black. It was first sung in the musical by the character Alex Dillingham, which was originated by Michael Ball in both the London and Broadway casts. The song was released as a single in 1989, also sung by Ball, and stayed on the UK Singles Chart for 15 weeks, peaking at No. 2 and becoming Ball's signature tune. The song was later featured on Ball's 1992 self-titled debut album and Love Changes Everything: The Collection.