Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Anna Domino (as Snakefarm) recorded a version on the 1999 album Songs From My Funeral. Carl Rutherford recorded a version on his 2001 album, Turn Off the Fear. [26] Bill Callahan (as Smog) recorded a version on his 2005 album A River Ain't Too Much to Love. Martin Simpson recorded a version titled "In the Pines" on his 2011 album Purpose + Grace.
"Backwater" is a song recorded by the Meat Puppets. It was released as the first single from the group's album Too High to Die. The single was released in three versions: one promo CDS and two singles. It is the Meat Puppets' most successful single.
The mugo pine is used in cooking. The cones can be made into a syrup called "pinecone syrup", [ 15 ] "pine cone syrup", [ 16 ] or mugolio. Buds and young cones are harvested from the wild in the spring and left to dry in the sun over the summer and into autumn.
The song peaked at number 27 on the US Billboard Hot 100. [5] "New Age Girl" was ultimately the band's only hit, with many labeling the band a one-hit wonder. Caleb Guillotte later reflected that, had the song not been a hit, "Maybe people would have been more prepared to think of us as the 'cool' band. There's all sorts of woulda, coulda ...
"Meat Is Murder" The Smiths: Meat Is Murder: Against all types of meat eating. 1985 English "Men In Helicopters" Adrian Belew: Young Lions: Anti-hunting, Anti-fishing, Anti-speciesism 1990 English "Nailing Descartes to the wall" Propagandhi: Less Talk More Rock: For the end of the killing of animals for food. 1996 English "Panda" Jefferson Airplane
Early in that century, too, possible evidence of the rhyme's prior existence is suggested by the appearance of the line "Tom would eat meat but wants a knife" in An excellent new Medley (c. 1620), a composite work in which each line incorporates a reference to a contemporary song. [4]
"Rubber Biscuit" is a novelty doo-wop song performed by the vocals-only team the Chips, who recorded it in 1956. It was covered by the Blues Brothers on their 1978 debut album, Briefcase Full of Blues, among many other artists, [1] as well as being featured in the 1973 film Mean Streets.
The Pushbike song was released by The Mixtures in 1970. It reached the top-spot for two weeks in the Australian charts in March 1971. It also proved popular in the UK, reaching the number two spot on 31 January (beaten by George Harrison's "My Sweet Lord"), and number 31 in Canada.