Mark Hollis piano sheet music of popular songs

Show more

Free scores

Musicians

Instruments

More

Difficulty

Arrangement

More

Genre

More

By popularity

  • By popularity

  • Newest releases first

  • Old releases first

Beginner
Sheet music, chords Mark Hollis - Crying In the Rain
4.2 (15)
0104
Piano.Easy
Piano
Beginner
Sheet music, chords Mark Hollis - Crying In the Rain
4.1 (58)
0155
Piano&Vocal.Easy
PianoVocal
Sheet music, chords Mark Hollis - Crying In the Rain
4.6 (51)
0150
Ukulele.Chords&Tab
Ukulele
Advanced
Sheet music, chords Mark Hollis - Crying In the Rain
4.5 (31)
098
Flute
Flute
Sheet music, chords Mark Hollis - Crying In the Rain
4.2 (15)
0107
Guitar.Chords&Tabs
Guitar
Sheet music, chords Mark Hollis - Crying In the Rain
4.7 (57)
0178
Piano.Solo&Chords
PianoGuitar
Advanced
Sheet music, chords Mark Hollis - Crying In the Rain
4.2 (35)
0122
Vocal
Vocal
Sheet music, chords Mark Hollis - Crying In the Rain
4.7 (52)
0135
Guitar&Vocal.Tab
GuitarVocal
Sheet music, chords Mark Hollis - Crying In the Rain
4.9 (55)
0122
Ukulele.Tab&Vocal
Ukulele
Sheet music, chords Mark Hollis - Crying In the Rain
4.5 (33)
0107
Piano.Easy&Chords
PianoGuitar
Advanced
Sheet music, chords Mark Hollis - Crying In the Rain
4.3 (32)
0133
Violin
Violin
Beginner
Sheet music, chords Mark Hollis - Crying In the Rain
4.1 (34)
0110
Guitar.Tab.Easy
Guitar
Mark David Hollis (4 January 1955 – February 2019) was an English musician and singer-songwriter. He achieved commercial success and critical acclaim in the 1980s and 1990s as the co-founder, lead singer and principal songwriter of the band Talk Talk. Hollis wrote or co-wrote most of Talk Talk's music—including hits like "It's My Life" and "Life's What You Make It"—and in later works developed an experimental, contemplative style. Beginning in 1981 as a synth-pop group with a New Romantic image, Talk Talk's sound became increasingly adventurous under Hollis's direction. For their third album, The Colour of Spring (1986), Talk Talk adopted an art pop sound that won critical and commercial favour; it remains their biggest commercial success. The band's final two albums, Spirit of Eden (1988) and Laughing Stock (1991), were radical departures from their early work, taking influence from jazz, folk, classical and experimental music. While they were commercial failures in their own time, these albums were retrospectively highly critically acclaimed and have come to be seen as early landmarks of post-rock music.