Bolland & Bolland piano sheet music of popular songs

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Sheet music, chords Bolland & Bolland - Tears of Ice
4.9 (12)
080
Ukulele.Tab&Vocal
Ukulele
Sheet music, chords Bolland & Bolland - Tears of Ice
4.3 (51)
0125
Piano.Solo&Chords
PianoGuitar
Beginner
Sheet music, chords Bolland & Bolland - Tears of Ice
4.7 (47)
0146
Piano&Vocal.Easy
PianoVocal
Sheet music, chords Bolland & Bolland - Tears of Ice
4.3 (39)
0120
Ukulele.Chords&Tab
Ukulele
Beginner
Sheet music, chords Bolland & Bolland - Tears of Ice
4.5 (50)
0137
Guitar.Tab.Easy
Guitar
Sheet music, chords Bolland & Bolland - Tears of Ice
4.7 (45)
0116
Guitar.Chords&Tabs
Guitar
Beginner
Sheet music, chords Bolland & Bolland - Tears of Ice
4.5 (60)
0123
Piano.Easy
Piano
Sheet music, chords Bolland & Bolland - Tears of Ice
4.1 (33)
0110
Piano.Easy&Chords
PianoGuitar
Advanced
Sheet music, chords Bolland & Bolland - Tears of Ice
4.5 (47)
0144
Vocal
Vocal
Advanced
Sheet music, chords Bolland & Bolland - Tears of Ice
4.2 (23)
0102
Violin
Violin
Advanced
Sheet music, chords Bolland & Bolland - Tears of Ice
4.1 (21)
0126
Flute
Flute
Sheet music, chords Bolland & Bolland - Tears of Ice
4.5 (31)
0107
Guitar&Vocal.Tab
GuitarVocal

Bolland & Bolland are two Dutch music producers and brothers, Rob Bolland (born 17 April 1955) and Ferdi Bolland (born 5 August 1956). They were born in Port Elizabeth in South Africa. The duo produced and wrote for such artists as Falco (including his Number 1 hit "Rock Me Amadeus"), Samantha Fox ("Love House"), and wrote the Status Quo hit "In the Army Now" – which they released under their own name in 1981 and which was also recorded by Gerard Joling. As musicians in their own right, they released their first album "Florida" in 1972. Their hit singles career started as early as 1972, with "Summer of '71" in a folk, a cappella-style following the success of Simon and Garfunkel and their Dutch equivalents Greenfield and Cook. When, in 1976, their success started to wane, they turned towards a more electronic sound, an early example of which can be heard in "Spaceman", a 1978 hit in the Netherlands.