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The performance was later released as a music video on YouTube. [25] As of 2024, the Scorpions have changed the opening lyrics again to adopt a more neutral tone, displaying these on the video screens at gigs: "Now listen to my heart, it still believes in love, waiting for the wind to change.
Crazy World is the eleventh studio album by the German hard rock band Scorpions, released on 6 November 1990. [8] The album peaked at No. 21 on the Billboard 200 chart for albums in 1991. [9] That same year, the song "Wind of Change" reached No. 4 on the Billboard Hot 100 [9] and "Send Me an Angel" reached No. 44 on the same chart. [9]
Frontman Klaus Meine: "I thought this is not the time to romanticize Russia." Scorpions Alter “Wind of Change” Lyrics in Wake of Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine Spencer Kaufman
Wind of Change (Scorpions song) Y. You and I (Scorpions song) Z. The Zoo (song) This page was last edited on 21 November 2021, at 06:35 (UTC). Text is available ...
Wind of Change" is played in the off-Broadway production Power Balladz. [citation needed] "Wind of Change" is a podcast from Pineapple Street Studios, Crooked Media and Spotify that explores a rumor that the song was actually written by the CIA. [88]
A symphonic metal version of the song, featuring the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, was recorded for Scorpions' 2000 album Moment of Glory. An unplugged version was recorded for Scorpions' 2001 album Acoustica. A "sequel" of the song was recorded for Scorpions' 2010 album Sting in the Tail, entitled "SLY", an acronym for "Still Loving You".
Klaus' beyond-Scorpions collaborations include "Bridge to Heaven" with Uli Jon Roth, "Send Me an Angel", "Bigger than Life", "Keep the World Safe" and "Jerusalem of Gold" with Israeli singer Liel Kolet, "Bis wohin reicht mein Leben" from Rilke Projekt, "Wind of Change" with the tenor José Carreras, and the song "Dying for an Angel" from the ...
It was released as the album's fourth and final single in September 1991. Along with "Wind of Change", the song became the album's signature track, reaching number 44 on Billboard Hot 100 Chart on 25 January 1992, number 8 on the Mainstream Rock Chart [1] on 19 October 1991, and high chart positions in many European countries.