Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Baltimore-based rock band, consisting of Katrina Ford, Sean Antanaitis and David Bergander Central Maryland Chorale: Vocal classical group, based in Laurel, and having evolved from the Laurel Oratorio Society: Channels: Baltimore-based rock band, consisting of J. Robbins, Darren Zentek and Janet Morgan Children's Chorus of Maryland and School ...
Weed is the tenth album by singer-songwriter and guitarist, Chris Whitley.It is his eighth studio album. The album is Whitley's acoustic re-recording of a selection of songs he wrote from 1986 to 1996 for his three recordings on Columbia / Work Records: Living with the Law (1991), Din of Ecstasy (1995), and Terra Incognita (1997).
You Got My Mind Messed Up is a 1967 album by James Carr. Although Carr is not as well-known as his contemporaries such as Otis Redding or Aretha Franklin, "You Got My Mind Messed Up" has been cited as one of the top soul music albums of all time. Allmusic gave it 5 stars from two different reviewers.
"Messed Up as Me" is a song recorded and co-produced by New Zealand-born Australian-American country artist Keith Urban. [1] The song was written by Jessie Jo Dillon, Shane McAnally, Michael Lotten, and Rodney Clawson. [2] It was released on March 1, 2024 as the lead single from Urban's twelfth studio album High.
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
"The original demos I did, all the songs ended up on the record," Cross, 73, says in the documentary, which premiered Nov. 13 at the DOC NYC festival. "I financed my original songs by selling weed.
All the singles the group had made, along with some additional songs written by Dan Greer, were released as an album entitled You've Got My Mind Messed Up in 1990. The album consisted of sixteen tracks and was later reworked and released in 2001 and again in 2003 as The Complete Quiet Elegance, consisting of the same sixteen tracks plus some ...
Drugs became much more common and easier to obtain in terms of mass production, and other, even newer subgenres of music such as acid rock picked up acclaim due to efforts by groups such as Cream (band), Jimi Hendrix Experience, The Doors, and the Grateful Dead. Mass media evolved to the point that having references to drug use in songs became ...