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"Sympathy for the Devil" is a song by English rock band the Rolling Stones. The song was written by Mick Jagger and credited to the Jagger–Richards partnership. It is the opening track on the band's 1968 album Beggars Banquet .
Sympathy for the Devil is a 2023 American psychological thriller film [3] directed by Yuval Adler and written by Luke Paradise. It stars Nicolas Cage as The Passenger and Joel Kinnaman as The Driver.
"Good Idea At The Time" (2005) on OK Go's "Oh No" album, was an answer song to The Rolling Stones' "Sympathy for the Devil" (1968): in it, the Devil argues that the historical atrocities enumerated in the original were entirely of human doing. Das Urteil by Kool Savas was a response to Die Abrechnung by Eko Fresh.
Sympathy for the Devil (originally titled 1 + 1; also One Plus One, by the film director, and distributed under that title in Europe) is a 1968 avant-garde film shot mostly in color by director Jean-Luc Godard, his first British-made, English-language film. [2]
Sympathy for the Devil" is a song by the Rolling Stones. Sympathy for the Devil may also refer to: Sympathy for the Devil, a film by Jean-Luc Godard; Sympathy for the Devil, a film by Guillaume de Fontenay; Sympathy for the Devil, directed by Yuval Adler; Sympathy for the Devil, an album by Laibach
Jagger (left) and Richards (right) in June 1972 at Winterland in San Francisco. Jagger–Richards (spelled Jagger–Richard from 1963 to 1978) [nb 1] is the songwriting partnership between English musicians Mick Jagger and Keith Richards (both born 1943), founder members of rock band the Rolling Stones.
"Sympathy for the De Vil" is the eighteenth episode of the fourth season of the American fantasy drama series Once Upon a Time, which aired on April 19, 2015. In this episode, a young Cruella de Vil is tortured by her mother's evil use of her Dalmatians, resulting in her eventual confinement to her attic until a strange visitor tells her she ...
Jazz was often called the Devil's music by its critics in the 1920s. [3]The Rolling Stones' "Sympathy for the Devil" (1968) features Mick Jagger speaking as the Devil. "The Devil Went Down to Georgia" (1979) by the Charlie Daniels Band was the first modern popular song to feature a battle between the devil and a musician.