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An instrumental version of "Sailor (Your Home Is The Sea)" appears on the 1961 album Songs Of The Soaring '60s Volume 1 by Roger Williams: the track later served as B-side for Williams' 1965 single release "Summer Wind".
"Home by the Sea" and "Second Home by the Sea" is a suite of two songs by English rock band Genesis. It first appeared on their eponymous album in 1983. The lyrics were written by keyboardist Tony Banks and the music was written by the whole band. Lyrically, the song is about a burglar who breaks into a house only to find it is haunted. [1]
In 2013, the Wellington Sea Shanty Society released a version of the song on their album Now That's What I Call Sea Shanties Vol. 1. [3] A particularly well-known rendition of the song was made by the Bristol -based a cappella musical group the Longest Johns on their collection of nautical songs Between Wind and Water in 2018. [ 16 ]
"Walk Away" is a song by American pop singer Kelly Clarkson for her second studio album, Breakaway (2004). The song was written and produced by Chantal Kreviazuk , Raine Maida , and Kara DioGuardi , with additional writing from Clarkson.
The song was the second from Baroness to appear on music charts, spending five weeks on the Billboard Active Rock chart. [2] Much like the group's previous single, a music video was filmed in 2012 while the band was touring with Meshuggah. [3] The video was directed by Jimmy Hubbard and released in January 2013. [4]
And the song of our hearts shall be, While the wind and the water rave. A life on the heaving sea, A home on the bounding wave. (Chorus) A life on the ocean wave, A home on the rolling deep, Where the scattered waters rave, and the winds their revels keep, The winds, the winds, the winds their revels keep,
and sideways for three days. All the creeks. conspired to the raging river. As the flood seeped beneath our door. my mother sat me on her hip. She carried me, muddy foam. striking her knees, then ...
"Maggie May" (or "Maggie Mae") (Roud No. 1757) is a traditional Liverpool folk song about a prostitute who robbed a "homeward bounder", a sailor coming home from a round trip. John Manifold, in his Penguin Australian Song Book, described it as "A foc'sle song of Liverpool origin apparently, but immensely popular among seamen all over the world ...