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"The Lakes" is a song by the American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift, taken from the deluxe edition of her eighth studio album, Folklore (2020). Written and produced by Swift and Jack Antonoff, "The Lakes" is a midtempo indie ballad, set to acoustic guitar and strings, with themes of introspection and escapism that reflect on Swift's semi-retirement in Windermere, the largest natural lake in ...
"Indian Lake" is a song with music and lyrics written by Tony Romeo. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] It was recorded by the pop band The Cowsills , and included on their 1968 album Captain Sad and His Ship of Fools (MGM E/SE-4554).
The song is named for and set on the shores of the major estuarine waterbodies of the Pontchartrain Basin, [2] including lakes Maurepas, Pontchartrain, and Borgne.Lake Pontchartrain forms the northern boundary of New Orleans, while Lake Maurepas is west of Lake Pontchartrain and connected to Lake Pontchartrain by Pass Manchac and North Pass.
The song was written in the key of A minor. [2] It is driven by an acoustic guitar line with layers of electric guitar (both rhythm and lead), electric bass guitar, and sung by Lake, with some backing on drums (played by Carl Palmer with congas, tympani mallets and without cymbals), and with a distinctive closing synthesizer solo from Keith Emerson, accompanied by overdubbed synthesizer sounds.
Brandon Lake released the official music video of "Count 'Em" through their YouTube channel on August 4, 2023. [19] Lake also released the lyric video for the song via YouTube on the same day. [20] On January 19, 2024, Lake released the live performance video of the song recorded during the Summer Worship Nights Tour on YouTube. [21] [22]
Lake is the first studio album by Lake, released in Germany in 1976 and the USA in 1977. The track "Time Bomb" was the band's highest charting single of their career. It reached #91 in Canada in December 1977.
"This Never Happened Before" is a song from Paul McCartney's 2005 album Chaos and Creation in the Backyard. It was released to radio stations in the United States in 2006, peaking at #27 on Billboard's Adult Contemporary chart (see 2006 in music). [1] It was included in the soundtrack of the movie The Lake House (2006).
"Lucky Man" is a song by the English progressive rock supergroup Emerson, Lake & Palmer (ELP), from the group's 1970 self-titled debut album.Written by Greg Lake when he was 12 years old and recorded by the trio using improvised arrangements, [1] the song contains one of rock music's earliest instances of a Moog synthesizer solo.