Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The song was originally about a friend named Leo and with the opening line "Leo, my God, why don't you come to your senses..." [ 5 ] In 1972, after they had recorded their debut studio album, Eagles , in London, Glenn Frey and Henley decided that they should write songs together, and within a day or two after returning from London they wrote ...
Desperado: The Soundtrack is the film score to Robert Rodriguez’s Desperado. It was written and performed by the Los Angeles rock bands Los Lobos and Tito & Tarantula, performing traditional Ranchera and Chicano rock music. Other artists on the soundtrack album include Dire Straits, Link Wray, Latin Playboys, and Carlos Santana.
The songs on Desperado are based on the themes of the Old West. The band members are featured on the album's cover dressed like an outlaw gang; Desperado remains the only Eagles album where the band members appear on the front cover. Although the title track is one of the Eagles' signature songs, it was never released as a single.
"Tequila Sunrise" is a song from 1973, written by Don Henley and Glenn Frey, and recorded by the Eagles. It was the first single from the band's second album, Desperado. [2] It peaked at number 64 on the Billboard Hot 100. A cover version was recorded by country music singer Alan Jackson on the 1993 tribute album Common Thread: The Songs of the ...
Desperado is a 1995 American neo-Western action film written, co-produced, edited and directed by Robert Rodriguez. It is the second part of Rodriguez's Mexico Trilogy. It stars Antonio Banderas as El Mariachi who seeks revenge on the drug lord who killed his lover. The film was screened out of competition at the 1995 Cannes Film Festival. [5]
Once Upon a Time in Mexico was released in the United States on September 12, 2003 by Sony Pictures Releasing through Columbia Pictures, and internationally by Miramax International through Buena Vista International, in 3,282 theaters with an opening weekend gross of US$23.4 million. It went on to make $56.4 million in North America and $41.8 ...
The song is also the theme song of the series. Tito had met Rodriguez when filming Desperado. During the mixing of the film, Tito was playing a previously written song, that happened to be about vampires, which caught the ear of Rodriguez. Rodriguez mentioned that his next film was about vampires, and asked if he could videotape the song ...
Desperado (film series), a series of five TV movies from 1987 to 1989; Desperado, a 1995 action thriller with Antonio Banderas; Desperados, a 2020 American comedy film; The Desperadoes, a 1943 Western starring Randolph Scott and Claire Trevor