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Four Good Days is a 2020 American drama film, directed and produced by Rodrigo García, from a screenplay by García and Eli Saslow, based upon Saslow's 2016 Washington Post article "How's Amanda? A Story of Truth, Lies and an American Addiction". [3] It stars Glenn Close, Mila Kunis, and Stephen Root.
"From Four Until Late" (or "From Four Till Late") is a blues song written by Delta blues musician Robert Johnson. He recorded it in Dallas, Texas, during his second to last session for producer Don Law on June 19, 1937. [1] The lyrics contained his philosophical lines of "a man is like a prisoner, and he's never satisfied". [2]
"Mayday" is a song by Canadian rock band Three Days Grace. It was released on November 22, 2024, via RCA Records as the lead single from their upcoming eighth studio album. . The song marks the return of vocalist Adam Gontier, who returned to the group in October 2024 after an 11-year absence, with Gontier now sharing lead vocal duties with Matt Wal
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"10 Days Late" was released as the third single from Third Eye Blind's 1999 album, Blue. [2] [3] It was also included on the band's 2006 compilation album, A Collection.[4] "10 Days Late" spent 10 weeks on the US Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart, peaking at number 21 on June 17, 2000.
ABC and CNN used it as their theme for the Katrina coverage. The song was featured on the pilot episode of CBS' 2006 TV series, Jericho.The song was performed live on September 25, 2006, prior to the New Orleans Saints return to the Superdome, [3] The song also featured as the theme of WWE Tribute to the Troops 2006, a special broadcast of WWE Raw which aired on Christmas night 2006.
127 Hours: Music from the Motion Picture is the soundtrack to Danny Boyle's 2010 film of the same name.It was composed by Academy Award Winner A. R. Rahman, Boyle's previous collaborator on Slumdog Millionaire.
Morrison asserted that the song's lyrics are not political. [2] Part of the song ("Your ballroom days are over, baby/ Night is drawing near/ Shadows of the evening/ crawl across the years"), was seemingly lifted from the 19th-century hymnal and bedtime rhyme "Now the Day Is Over" ("Now the day is over/ Night is drawing nigh/ Shadows of the evening/ Steal across the sky") by Morrison. [10]