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"Thin Thing" is a song by English rock band The Smile. It is the 7th song and 6th single on their first album A Light for Attracting Attention , and was released on 9 May 2022. [ 1 ]
The song was later featured on the yearly best-of compilation album titled Monstercat: Best of 2017 released on 18 December 2017. [6] As of 18 November 2019, the song has gained around 1,460,000 plays on SoundCloud and over 6,272,000 and 2,025,000 views on Laura Brehm's and Monstercat's YouTube channels respectively.
Also in 1992, rapper Kid Frost sampled this song on his track "Thin Line". [7] This song is included on his album East Side Story and reached #82 on the Billboard R&B chart. In 1995, Annie Lennox recorded a cover with slightly modified lyrics, with a second-person viewpoint and additional final verses, featured on her second solo album Medusa. [8]
[7] [15] [17] "Thin Brown Layer" has a noticeable Latin rhythm and guitar arrangement. [7] The song also contains a predominant hypnotic beat, which, according to one music critic, "makes you feel stoned even after completing a Twelve step program". [17] "Terra Unifirma", "Another Brother Gone" and "Broken Blood" are built around laid-back ...
"Waiting for an Alibi" is a song by the Irish rock band Thin Lizzy and the first single from the band's 1979 album, Black Rose: A Rock Legend. [1] Black Rose was the only Thin Lizzy album recorded while Gary Moore was a member of the band, [ 1 ] and he left soon after.
Infinity Song might have gone viral on TikTok for a track called “Hater’s Anthem,” but they want you to know they’re way too content to actually be haters anymore. “I feel like that song ...
"The Boys Are Back in Town" is a song by Irish hard rock band Thin Lizzy. The song was released in 1976 as the first single from their album Jailbreak.It is considered by Rolling Stone to be the band's best song, placing it at No. 272 on the 2021 edition of the "500 Greatest Songs of All Time" list.
Dylan's song revolves around the mishaps of a Mr. Jones, who keeps blundering into strange situations, and the more questions he asks, the less the world makes sense to him. Critic Andy Gill called the song "one of Dylan's most unrelenting inquisitions, a furious, sneering, dressing-down of a hapless bourgeois intruder into the hipster world of ...