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"Day Is Done" is a song written by Peter Yarrow. It was recorded by Yarrow's group Peter, Paul and Mary and released as a single in 1969. An anti-war protest song of the Vietnam War era, the song reached No. 21 on Billboard Hot 100 , and was ranked No. 48 on the Billboard year-end Top Easy Listening Singles chart of 1969.
"Day Is Gone" is a song by English rock band Cardiacs from their third studio album, Heaven Born and Ever Bright (1992). It was released as a twelve-inch single preceding the album on 28 October 1991 alongside a free 7-inch titled "Appealing to Venus" (b/w "Tree Tops High") by side project the Sea Nymphs from their eponymous debut studio album (1992).
Day Is Done may refer to: "Day Is Done" (song), a 1969 song by Peter, Paul and Mary; Day Is Done, a 2005 album by Brad Mehldau "Taps" (bugle call), sometimes known as "Day Is Done", from the first line of the lyric "Day Is Done," a song by Nick Drake from Five Leaves Left "Day Is Done", a song by John Prine from Lost Dogs and Mixed Blessings
In the Church of England an adapted version of Caswall's translation by J. Chandler was included in William Henry Monk's 1861 hymnbook, Hymns Ancient and Modern. [8] [9] In 1906 Percy Dearmer published an adapted text based on Neale's translation in The English Hymnal, and the hymn was retained in the successor volume, The New English Hymnal ...
These Are Special Times is the seventeenth studio album and sixth English-language album by Canadian singer Celine Dion, and also her first English-language Christmas album. It was first released in Europe on 30 October 1998, by Columbia Records. In the United States, it was released on 3 November 1998 through Epic Records.
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Sandell-Berg was a prolific Swedish hymn writer. Two of her hymns, "Day By Day" and "Children of the Heavenly Father", are widely known in the United States. The earliest and most popular English translation of "Day by Day" is by Andrew L. Skoog, a Swedish immigrant to the United States. It started appearing in American hymnals in the latter ...
"Where Have All the Flowers Gone?" is a folk song written by American singer-songwriter Pete Seeger in 1955. Inspired lyrically by the traditional Cossack folk song "Koloda-Duda", Seeger borrowed an Irish melody for the music, [ 1 ] and published the first three verses in Sing Out! magazine. [ 2 ]