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Saints of Los Angeles (song) " Saints of Los Angeles " is the Grammy -nominated first single from Mötley Crüe 's album of the same name. It was released on April 11, 2008, and started airing on radio stations on April 15 and charted at number 5 on the Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks. [1] In the original Gang Vocal version, found on the album, the ...
The Way You Look Tonight. " The Way You Look To-night " is a song from the film Swing Time that was performed by Fred Astaire and composed by Jerome Kern with lyrics written by Dorothy Fields. It won the Academy Award for Best Original Song in 1936. [6][7] Fields remarked, "The first time Jerry played that melody for me I went out and started ...
I Love L.A. "I Love L.A." is a song by Randy Newman. It was originally released on his 1983 album Trouble in Paradise. The song is about Los Angeles, California, and its hook is its title, repeated, each time followed by an enthusiastic crowd cheering, "We love it!"
Murs) by Busy P. "To Wichita Falls from L.A." by Roberta Sherwood. "Toluca Lake" by Gregg Karukas. "Tom Jones International" by Tom Jones. "Too Dumb for New York City" by Waylon Jennings. "Too Much Hollywood" by Axewitch. "Too Much Hollywood" by Bonfire (band) "Topanga" by David Soul. "Topanga" by Kathy Smith.
help. " I Love You, California " is the state song and regional anthem of the U.S. state of California, originally published in 1913. It was adopted in 1951 and reconfirmed in 1987 as the official state song. The lyrics were written by Francis Beatty Silverwood (1863–1924), a Los Angeles clothier, [1][2] and the words were subsequently put to ...
"Pico and Sepulveda" is a 1947 song by Freddy Martin and his orchestra. Composed by Eddie Maxwell (Eddie Cherkose) and Jule Styne (Ambassador Records, 1947 — b/w "She of the Coffee Brown Eyes"), it features a Latin-style beat, and Martin used the alias "Felix Figueroa" when performing and recording the song.
Hotel California. " Hotel California " is a song by American rock band Eagles, released as the second single of their album of the same name on February 22, 1977. [6] The song was written by Don Felder (music), Don Henley, and Glenn Frey (lyrics), featuring Henley on lead vocals and concluding with an iconic 2 minute and 12 seconds long ...
The narrator protagonist of "Uneasy Rider" is a long-haired marijuana smoker driving a Chevrolet with a " peace sign, mag wheels, and four on the floor." The song is a spoken-word description of an interlude in a trip from a non-specified location in the Southern United States to Los Angeles, California. When one of the narrator's tires goes ...