Ai wa Hana Kimi wa sono Tane-The Rose
钢琴谱
客户端打开
一键简谱
高清看谱
全屏看谱
钢琴谱
Ai wa Hana Kimi wa sono Tane-The Rose
Harumi Kitamura
Ai wa Hana Kimi wa sono Tane-The Rose
Harumi Kitamura
Harumi Kitamura
未知
D调
现代(轻音乐)
较易
改编
105
Ai wa Hana, Kimi wa sono Tane Ai wa Hana, Kimi wa sono Tane (愛は花、君はその種子 "Love is a flower, you are its seed") is Japanese translation of The Rose and it was used as the ending theme song for the 1991 Studio Ghibli animated film Only Yesterday. Originally The Rose is a classic pop song written by Amanda McBroom and made famous by Bette Midler. There are two mixes of the song. The single mix features orchestration, while the version in the film (and on its soundtrack) includes an extended introduction while doing away with the orchestration in favor of piano-and-vocals only. The Lyrics of The Rose: some say love it is a river that drowns the tender reed some say love it is a razor that leaves your soul to bleed some say love it is a hunger an endless aching need i say love it is a flower and you is only seed (break) its the heart afraid of breaking that never learns to dance its the dream afraid of waking that never takes the chance its the one who wont be taken who can not seem to give and the soul afraid of dying that never learns to live (break) when the night has been too lonely and the road has been too long and you think that love is only for the lucky and the strong just remember in the winter far beneath the bitter snow lies the seed that with the suns love in the spring becomes the rose
表情
PC播放器不支持打开此曲谱,请在手机、平板端播放。