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"The View from the Afternoon" was expected to have been the band's third single, following UK number ones "I Bet You Look Good on the Dancefloor" and "When the Sun Goes Down", but the band announced in March 2006 that its next record would be a five-track EP, [2] which thereby disqualified it from being listed in the UK Singles Chart and UK Albums Chart [3] because it was too long to be a ...
"The View from the Afternoon" was expected to have been the band's third single, following UK number ones "I Bet You Look Good on the Dancefloor" and "When the Sun Goes Down", but the band announced in March 2006 that its next record would be a five-track EP, [20] which thereby disqualified it from being listed in the UK Singles Chart and UK ...
"The View from the Afternoon" was expected to have been the band's third single, following UK number ones "I Bet You Look Good on the Dancefloor" and "When the Sun Goes Down", but the band announced in March 2006 that its next record would be a five-track EP, [2] which thereby disqualified it from being listed in the UK Singles Chart and UK Albums Chart.
In Fake Tales of San Francisco Alex's lyrics sound much older than an 18-year-old, the lyrics display a much wiser and sadder tone. There is a dry sorrow feel to the lyrics, especially when love is compared to be blind and deaf as well. Turner revamps a known phrase and gives it a new meaning.
All the tracks in the film were performed by the film's cast members. At the Sound & Screen conference hosted by Deadline Hollywood, the executive music producer Ian Eisendrath stated that he was involved in the recording of vocals and orchestra, mixing and editing the camera work, where the actor actually sings those songs. Musical films are a ...
Cash Box said that this "Stunning teen-aimed ballad picks up rhythmic punch in a development that winds up a throbbing with top forty appeal." [6]Classic Rock History critic Brian Kachejian rated it as the Moody Blues' greatest song, saying that "Justin Hayward’s beautiful lyrics and melody combined with John Lodges’ guitar work and Mike Pinder’s Mellotron presented Moody Blues fans with ...
Lazy Afternoon may refer to: "Lazy Afternoon", a song written by Jerome Moross and John La Touche for the 1954 musical The Golden Apple; covered on most of the albums below; Lazy Afternoon (Barbra Streisand album), 1975; Lazy Afternoon (Regina Belle album), 2004; A Lazy Afternoon (Harold Land album), 1995; A Lazy Afternoon (Shirley Horn album ...
"Passing Afternoon" was played at the end of "Wilson's Heart," the finale of the fourth season of House. "Naked as We Came," "Trapeze Swinger" (a song not in this album) and "Sunset Soon Forgotten" were featured in the 2004 dramedy In Good Company. "Each Coming Night" is featured in the 2010 film The Last Song, starring Miley Cyrus. [15] "