Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Cruel to Be Kind" is a song co-written by Nick Lowe and his former bandmate Ian Gomm while the pair were in Brinsley Schwarz. The song only appeared as the 1978 B-side of "Little Hitler" until Columbia Records convinced Lowe to rerecord it as a potential solo single for his 1979 album Labour of Lust .
Many artists have written songs about child abuse, ... by New Order "Alyssa Lies", ... "Broom People", by The Mountain Goats
Ottman, not wanting to let his hard work go to waste, released his music in an album through Varèse Sarabande called Music Inspired by the Film Cruel Intentions: Suites and Themes from the Scores of John Ottman, which featured 10 tracks of his original score plus tracks from his work on other films and TV shows, including Halloween H20: 20 ...
Sebastian stans! Cruel Intentions’ theme song, The Verve’s “Bittersweet Symphony,” still follows Ryan Phillippe to this day — but he’s all for it. ’90s Stars: Where Are They Now ...
Scatman's World (song) Senzeni Na? Shame on You (Indigo Girls song) Shock to the System (Billy Idol song) Sing Our Own Song; Sing Out March On; Skip a Rope; Slave New World; Slave to the Grind (song) Society's Child; Solid Rock (Goanna song) Some People Change (song) Somos El Mundo 25 Por Haiti; Song of the Free; Sound of da Police; South ...
It was prominently featured in the 1999 drama film Cruel Intentions starring Sarah Michelle Gellar, Ryan Phillippe, Reese Witherspoon, and Selma Blair, [3] and has since been covered by various artists, including Between the Buried and Me [4] (who were named after a section of lyrics in the song "Ghost Train" from the first Counting Crows album ...
"Every You Every Me" is a song by British alternative rock band Placebo, released as the third single from their second album, Without You I'm Nothing, on 25 January 1999. It was released as a 2-CD set and on cassette, but promotional copies on 12-inch vinyl exist.
Some anti-war songs lament aspects of wars, while others patronize war.Most promote peace in some form, while others sing out against specific armed conflicts. Still others depict the physical and psychological destruction that warfare causes to soldiers, innocent civilians, and humanity as a whole.