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"Clarity" is a song written and recorded by American singer-songwriter John Mayer, arranged with piano, with drums provided in part by The Roots drummer Questlove, and brass by two-time Grammy winner Roy Hargrove. It was released as the second single from Mayer's second studio album, Heavier Things (2003), on January 12, 2004.
"Visions" is a song released in 1966 by Cliff Richard. The song spent 12 weeks on the UK's Record Retailer chart, peaking at No. 7, [2] while reaching No. 1 in Israel, [3] No. 1 in Malaysia, [4] No. 1 in Singapore, [4] No. 4 on the New Zealand Listener chart, [5] and No. 9 on the Irish Singles Chart. [6] The song was a hit in other nations as well.
The music video to "One Vision" which was recorded in September 1985 mainly showed the band recording the song at Musicland Studios in Munich and was the first to be directed and produced for Queen by Austrian directors Rudi Dolezal and Hannes Rossacher, also collectively known as DoRo.
At one point, she seems to allude ... Here, the full lyrics to the song: Verse 1: Did you really beam me up? In a cloud of sparkling dust ... Down bad, waking up in blood Staring at the sky, come ...
Attention was brought to SongMeanings in July 2007 when it was used to discuss what Tyondai Braxton meant in his underground song "Atlas". [9] However, one of the most hotly debated songs is the Eagles' "Hotel California" with thousands of users weighing in on the true meaning of the song; leading theories include addiction and a secret message ...
We get into a pattern of waking and sleeping that sees us opening our eyes in the middle of the night. The room is dark, but sure enough, the clock reads the same time as it did the night before ...
One is a stage on the way to coma, the other on the way to sleep, which is very different. [19] [20] The affected person has a sensation of mental clouding described in the patient's own words as "foggy". [4] One patient said, "I thought it became like misty, in some way... the outlines were sort of fuzzy". [18]
The word hypnagogia is sometimes used in a restricted sense to refer to the onset of sleep, and contrasted with hypnopompia, Frederic Myers's term for waking up. [2] However, hypnagogia is also regularly employed in a more general sense that covers both falling asleep and waking up.