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The song was first released as a single on April 2, 2013, two months before its respective album, The Sun Comes Out Tonight, was released on June 4, 2013. [2] The song received two music videos; one a "lyrics video" on April 28, 2013, [3] and one an actual music video, release at the same time of the album's release. [4]
The Sun Comes Out Tonight is the sixth studio album by American rock band Filter. [5] The album was released on June 4, 2013. Originally announced as Gurney and the Burning Books and intended for independent release in mid-2012, the band would later sign to major record label Wind-up Records, leading to them to delay and rename the release.
Its music video occupies the number 71 spot on Rolling Stone ' s 1993 list of the top 100 videos. [6] Though it was not released as a single in the US (or anywhere at the time of the album's release), "Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)" was released as a single in the Netherlands and some other European countries in 1979. [7] [8] [9]
Morgan Wallen will release new music tonight, after announcing 2023 world tour dates. Christi Carras. December 1, 2022 at 12:14 PM. ... which sold out prematurely and crashed the website.)
The discography of Filter, an American rock band, consists of eight studio albums, one compilation album, one remix album, two video albums, two extended plays, 20 singles and 11 music videos. Albums [ edit ]
The phrase "young Turks" is not heard in the song, the chorus instead centring on the phrase "young hearts, be free, tonight", leading to the song frequently being known as "Young Hearts" or "Young Hearts Be Free". The music for the song was composed by Carmine Appice, Duane Hitchings, and Kevin Savigar, with lyrics written by Stewart. [8]
"The Stars (Are Out Tonight)" is a song by English musician David Bowie; it serves as the second single from his twenty-fourth studio album The Next Day. The song's official music video was released on 25 February 2013 and the song itself was released for digital download the following day.
[1] It was one of the first songs on which Springsteen felt like an "observer," writing whatever came out of him rather than self-consciously trying to write something specific. [1] On the album, the piano solo at the end of the song segues directly into the guitar opening of the following song, "Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)." [2]