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"Galileo" is a song written by Emily Saliers and recorded and performed by folk rock group the Indigo Girls. It was released in 1992 on their platinum-selling fourth studio album Rites of Passage . It reached #10 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart, the first song by the Indigo Girls to break the top ten on any chart.
In June 2014, Newton's version of the song was ranked number 92 by Rolling Stone on its list of the 100 greatest country songs of all time. [12] Newton re-recorded "Queen of Hearts" for her 1998 album The Trouble With Angels. Juice Newton's first version of the song is featured in Oliver Stone's 1986 film Salvador and the 1997 film Boogie Nights.
The King of Hearts (the husband of the Queen of Hearts) calls for the tarts. He --the King-- demands the Knave must bring them back and (after the Knave brings them back) the King he beats the Knave harshly. (That is, as the line reads, "And he beat the knave full sore!".) So the Knave returns them and pledges to not steal again. The Queen of ...
The Looking Glass Wars, a series of novels by Frank Beddor featuring Queen Redd, an amalgamation of the Queen of Hearts and the Red Queen " Queen of the Broken Hearts ", a 1983 song by Loverboy Red Queen ( Through the Looking-Glass ) , a character in Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking-Glass
"Queen of Hearts" (Roud 3195) is a song sung by, among others, Joan Baez and Martin Carthy. The lyrics are from a traditional song. [1]To the Queen of Hearts is the Ace of Sorrow,
"Lily, Rosemary and the Jack of Hearts" is an epic narrative ballad by the American singer-songwriter Bob Dylan released as the seventh song (or the second track on Side Two of the vinyl) on his 1975 album Blood on the Tracks. It is known for its complex plot and nearly nine-minute running time.
The funeral of Queen Mary II (30 April 1662 – 28 December 1694) in Westminster Abbey was not until 5 March 1695. Purcell composed a setting of the sixth of the seven sentences of the Anglican Burial Service ("Thou Knowest Lord", Z. 58C) for the occasion, together with the March and Canzona, Z. 780. [1]
Mesomedes of Crete (Ancient Greek: Μεσομήδης ὁ Κρής) was a Greek citharode and lyric poet and composer of the early 2nd century AD in Roman Greece.Prior to the discovery of the Seikilos epitaph in the late 19th century, the hymns of Mesomedes were the only surviving written music from the ancient world. [1]