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The song was released on 9/11 of 2012, its music video on 9/11 of 2015, and was brought back to streaming sites 9/11 of 2021 after being taken down in August of that year. Lily Kershaw "Ashes Like Snow" Midnight in the Garden 2013 Originally written as a poem, [51] "Ashes Like Snow" is about the September 11 attacks. Lyrics include: "A strange ...
Pages in category "Music about the September 11 attacks" The following 52 pages are in this category, out of 52 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Ten Years On: A Collection of Songs in Remembrance of September 11th 2001, or simply Ten Years On, is a tribute album created by Welsh singer-songwriter and record producer Jem to commemorate the tenth anniversary of the September 11 attacks. [1] Money raised from sales of the album on iTunes was donated to the National September 11 Memorial ...
"Freedom" is a song written and recorded by Paul McCartney in response to the September 11 attacks in 2001. McCartney was in New York City at the time of the attacks and witnessed the event while sitting in a plane parked on the tarmac at New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport. [1]
Elegies is a song cycle by William Finn about the deaths of friends and family and is a response to the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. Elegies premiered at Lincoln Center in 2003 and has been performed in many other venues.
"El último adiós" (English: "The Last Goodbye") is a song written by Peruvian singer Gian Marco and Cuban American musician and producer Emílio Estefan to commemorate the September 11 attacks and support the families of the victims. [1] Proceeds of the recording went to the American Red Cross and the United Way. [2]
Following the September 11 attacks, Canadian pop star Celine Dion performed a new arrangement of "God Bless America" [1] on the telethon America: A Tribute to Heroes.The recorded version of this, done the day before the telethon in the event something happened and Dion could not appear, became the title track of this compilation.
The Village Voice called the song an "attempt to tie together the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and the run-up to the Iraq war," [11] The Los Angeles Times said the song has a "pro-war call to action," [12] and The Chicago Tribune said the song "essentially reads like a Bush position paper for entering Iraq with guns blazing."