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Closing Time is the debut album by American singer-songwriter Tom Waits, released on March 6, 1973, on Asylum Records. Produced and arranged by former Lovin' Spoonful member Jerry Yester , Closing Time was the first of seven of Waits' major releases by Asylum.
"Closing Time" is a song by American rock band Semisonic. It was released on March 10, 1998, as the lead single from their second studio album, Feeling Strangely Fine , and began to receive mainstream radio airplay on April 27, 1998.
Waits has also released one video album and 16 music videos. Waits's debut release was the 1973 single "Ol' '55", which was the lead single for his debut album Closing Time (1973). He began recording in 1971, but these first sessions would not be released until the beginning of the 1990s. For most of the 1970s he recorded for Asylum Records.
Semisonic's breakthrough came two years later in 1998 when their second album, Feeling Strangely Fine, reached the Top 50 chart on the strength of the hit single "Closing Time", their biggest hit in the United States. During a 2008 performance at Harvard's Sanders Theatre, Wilson said that it was originally written about the birth of his first ...
Closing Time, a 1973 album by Tom Waits, or the title song "Closing Time" (Deacon Blue song), 1991 "Closing Time" (Hole song), 1993 "Closing Time" (Semisonic song), 1998 "Closing Time", a song by Leonard Cohen from The Future, 1992 "Closing Time", a song by Lyle Lovett from Lyle Lovett, 1986
[19] The music video for Cohen's song "Closing Time" also won the Juno Award for Best Music Video in 1993. [18] In the original Rolling Stone review, Christian Wright called the album "epic", enthusing "The Future might as easily have been a book: A more troubling, more vexing image of human failure has not been written."
Feeling Strangely Fine is the second studio album by American rock band Semisonic.It is the follow-up to the band's debut album Great Divide recorded at Seedy Underbelly Studio in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
All of these except "Closing Time" were Top 40 hits on the country charts; "Nobody Wins" was the highest-charting, reaching #2. The album's title refers to Foster's birth year and birthplace. Track listing