The Titanic movie theme song was created by James Horner, a famous composer for mainstream Hollywood movies, and the Scottish bagpipes, with their strong ethnic flavor, were arranged in his exquisite arrangement, which is both melodious and poignant. The song's melody evolves from a gentle to a stirring climax to a heart-wrenching and tragic finale, and the four-minute song is actually a condensed version of the entire movie.
Canadian singer Celine Dion sang the movie's theme song, "My Heart Will Go On," which was the centerpiece of the movie's musical success, and was the Billboard number one song for 16 weeks. It was the number one song on the Billboard charts for 16 weeks.
The theme song, "My Heart Will Go On," is so passionate and touching that it blends well with the music of the movie, making the movie very compelling. We can hear the majestic symphony when the "unsinkable" ship sets sail, but also hear the melody when the ship crashes into the iceberg; we can feel the tenderness of the lovers, but also feel the sadness when the ship sinks. In Celin Dion's final lines, which are almost shouting, we hear not just a few lines of simple lyrics, but a manifesto that moves heaven and earth and makes the listener's heart flutter, and Dion himself once said, "My heart trembles, I cry, and I can hardly control my voice when I'm singing."
Despite the fact that "Titanic" depicts an unconvincing love, the song "My Heart Will Go On" is recognized as a masterpiece and has been sung over and over again, and may every person in the world be blessed with the kind of love expressed in "My Heart Will Go On". I hope that everyone in the world will get the love expressed in "My Heart Will Go On".
For a while, with the release of "Titanic", the theme song "My Heart Will Go On" filled the streets of the world, the distribution of the wide, probably only the air can match. Just as a soaring interest poured it into your ears a thousand times, ten thousand times, did you ever wonder if anyone would even mention it a year from now? That's the vicious side of the world, that anything good has to be used to prop you up first, and then tossed aside, never to be heeded again. That singer-songwriter, who was used to the cold rules of the entertainment world long before "Titanic" hit theaters, wouldn't have doubled her enthusiasm to turn gold into gold in her singing if she hadn't. French-Canadian Celine Dion has long held her own with The Power Of Love. Her soprano voice is beautiful, but never showy, and she specializes in the kind of big songs that are full of emotion and energy. "The Power Of Love" has the momentum of a long wind, while "My Heart Remains" is as sad as the sea, and one is positive and the other is negative, which is just right to fulfill the great love that does not exist in the world. Compared with Whitney Houston, Mariah Carey, Celine Dion's temperament shines with a noble light, she does not have the gift of mobilizing the passion of the flesh, but can catch the secret of spiritual sublimation, no matter her song echoes in the sunny sky and clouds, or the dead sea, are echoing, are not staying in the flesh of the transcendence. In fact, "Titanic" earns tears, "My Heart Remains" earns neoclassical, from the other side of the beauty of the experience.