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"Ride Like the Wind" was the first song recorded for Cross's eponymous album and was tracked by Cross's band of Tommy Taylor on drums, Andy Salman on bass, and Rob Meurer on synthesizers. After the first day of recording, Cross's producer Michael Omartian noticed that the band had struggled to become accustomed to the studio. "They were great ...
List of songs on the BASF 4|1 tape that includes "Subways of Your Mind" (mislabelled as "Blind the Wind") and a question mark indicating that the artist was unknown. A German teenager named Darius S. recorded the song from a radio program on the North German public radio station Norddeutscher Rundfunk (NDR) in the 1980s.
"Ride Like the Wind" hit number two on the U.S. Hot 100, while "Sailing" topped the chart for one week. [2] "Never Be The Same" went number one on the Adult Contemporary chart. Cross, the album, and the song "Sailing" were nominated for six Grammy Awards in 1980 and won five. [21]
The title, and the album's title track, is a double entendre that combines and confuses the idiom "make like the wind" (also possibly a reference to the Christopher Cross song "Ride Like the Wind", famously covered by British heavy metal band Saxon) with "break wind", a euphemism for flatulence.
"Ride the Wind" is a song by American glam metal band Poison. It was the third single from the group's 1990 studio album Flesh & Blood, released on Capitol.
The song "Auld Lang Syne" comes from a Robert Burns poem. Burns was the national poet of Scotland and wrote the poem in 1788, but it wasn't published until 1799—three years after his death.
Walking in Avalon, Christopher Cross’s seventh album released in 1998, is a double album package that contains Christopher's latest new studio album and Greatest Hits Live album together.
The song appears to be about two former lovers who have since moved on and married other people. Now, they are neighbors and occasionally make small talk about the weather. This is not sitting ...