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"Where Eagles Dare" is a song by the American punk rock band Misfits. Written by frontman and vocalist Glenn Danzig , the song was recorded and first released in 1979, alongside the track "Rat Fink", as the B-side of the band's single " Night of the Living Dead ".
[7] In 2016, the editors of Rolling Stone rated "The Last Resort" as the Eagles #27 greatest song. [3] Ultimate Classic Rock critic Sterling Whitaker rated it as the Eagles most underrated song, calling it "an epic track that presented the entire world as a resort being destroyed by the greedy, self-serving and short-sighted machinations of the ...
On Eagle's Wings" is a devotional hymn composed by Michael Joncas. Its words are based on Psalm 91 , [ 1 ] Book of Exodus 19, and Matthew 13 . [ 2 ] Joncas wrote the piece in either 1976 [ 3 ] or 1979, [ 1 ] [ 4 ] after he and his friend, Douglas Hall, returned from a meal to learn that Hall's father had died of a heart attack. [ 5 ]
Dreaming of an Eagle Spiritual Meaning. You can dream about pretty much anything when you drift off to sleep. However, if you dream about this particular bird, Pickett says it most likely has to ...
"Outlaw Man" is a song written by David Blue and recorded by the American rock band Eagles. The song was chosen by the Eagles for their second album Desperado as the song fits the theme of a Western outlaw gang of the album. [1] It is the second single released from Desperado after "Tequila Sunrise", and the eighth track on the album. [2]
The Eagles' version of "Journey of the Sorcerer" was used as the theme tune to the original BBC Radio 4 Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy radio series in 1978. [5] [6] Creator Douglas Adams was looking for a particular piece of music that would distinctively represent the series, that sounded "spacey" but not serious, such as a banjo.
A similar proverb in Japanese is 目の寄る所へ玉が寄る, literally "where the eyes go, the eyeballs follow" but with an understood idiomatic meaning of "like draws like", which can be translated into idiomatic English as "birds of a feather flock together", [13] as may the Japanese saying 類は友を呼ぶ, "similar calls a friend." [14]
The concept is similar to that in the Gospel of Matthew 18:20, "Where two or three are gathered together in my name there am I in their midst." [5]: 149 Some Christian theologians have connected the concept of shekhinah to the Greek term parousia, "presence" or "arrival," which is used in the New Testament in a similar way for "divine presence".