Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Man in the Mirror" is a song by the American singer Michael Jackson. It was written by Glen Ballard and Siedah Garrett and produced by Jackson and Quincy Jones . It was released in January 1988 as the fourth single from Jackson's seventh solo album, Bad (1987).
Man in the Mirror: The Michael Jackson Story is a 2004 biographical drama television film directed by Allan Moyle and written by Claudia Salter. [1] It stars Flex Alexander as American pop star Michael Jackson, and follows his rise to fame and subsequent events. [2] The film takes its title from one of Jackson's songs, "Man in the Mirror".
Ronson and Bowie had already covered this track live 20 years earlier, while touring as Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars. Ronson also produced Bowie's cover of the Morrissey-penned "I Know It's Gonna Happen". [citation needed] His second and third solo albums were Play Don't Worry in 1975, and Heaven and Hull in 1994. The latter set was ...
In the 1993 video game Back to the Future Part III the song is rendered in Chiptune for background music during the first level. Rock band Spiderbait recorded the song as part of the 2007 film Ghost Rider. [citation needed] Susan Christie recorded the song on her album Paint a Lady, recorded in 1969 but released in 2006.
Riders in the Sky is an American Western music and comedy group which began performing in 1977. [1] The band has released more than 40 albums, starred in a single-season self-titled television series on CBS, wrote and starred in an NPR syndicated radio drama Riders Radio Theater, and appeared in television series and films including as featured contributors to Ken Burns' Country Music.
Photographer Nicky Bay says in his blog describing the mirror spider: "The silver plates on its abdomen seem to shrink when the spider is agitated, or perhaps threatened."
"Eye in the Sky" is a song by British rock band the Alan Parsons Project, released as a single from their sixth studio album, Eye in the Sky (1982), in May 1982. It entered the US Billboard charts on 3 July and hit No. 3 in October 1982, [ 5 ] No. 1 in both Canada and Spain, and No. 6 in New Zealand, becoming their most successful release.
The album appeared in 1970 with a cover on which the band poses turned away from the camera, their uncovered backs exposed except where covered with their long hair. A radio commercial that accompanied the album's release touted the band as "unisex, raw, together, and violent—just like you, fellow American".