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"Squeeze Box" is a song by the British rock band the Who from their album The Who by Numbers. Written by Pete Townshend , the lyrics are couched in sexual double entendres. Unlike many of the band's other hits, the song features country-like elements, as heard in Townshend's banjo picking.
In the song Eminem raps through the eyes of a sadistic killer who likens his prey to a delicious meal, fueled by the haunting sound of his music box. The production was praised as "minimalistic, which consists simply of deep bass thump and a looping toy-chest's song, which provides the perfect backdrop for Eminem's ferocious delivery." [1]
"Man in the Box" has been described as a grunge, [5] [6] alternative metal, [7] [8] hard rock, [6] and alternative rock song. [9] It is widely recognized by its distinctive "wordless opening melody, where Layne Staley's peculiar, tensed-throat vocals are matched in unison with an effects-laden guitar" followed by "portentous lines like: 'Feed my eyes, can you sew them shut?', 'Jesus Christ ...
Eilish added, singing the first few plaintive notes of the song, which would eventually become the lyrics, “I used to float, now I just fall down / I used to know, but I’m not sure now.” The ...
Some songwriters create songs on demand; they sit down to write, and it just happens. David J is not that sort of artist. “I have tried to do that a couple of times in the past,” he says ...
Box Car Racer: 2002 This song was written from the perspective of a jumper from the towers and from the perspective of someone watching from below. Box Car Racer "Watch The World" Box Car Racer: 2002 Lyrics include "I watched the smoke, as it grew darker, and blew up through the roof. I watched the fed, saw them panic as the fire grew.
The song was number 245 on Rolling Stone magazine's 2004 list of the 500 greatest songs of all time. [5] Pitchfork Media named it the forty-second best song of the 1960s. [10] The song is included in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's "500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll" [11] and Time magazine's All-Time 100. [12]
"The Musical Box" is a song by English progressive rock band Genesis, which was originally released on their third studio album Nursery Cryme in 1971. [2] The song is written in the key of F# major. This song is the longest song on the album at ten and a half minutes.