Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Addison Road was a Christian alternative pop/rock band from Dallas, Texas. [1] The band was signed to INO Records in 2007 and released its self-titled debut album, Addison Road , on March 18, 2008. Its songs "All That Matters" and "Sticking With You" were the ninth and fifteenth most-played songs on R&R magazine's Christian CHR chart for 2008 ...
Addison Road is the first album by Christian rock band Addison Road.It was released on March 18, 2008, and entered the Billboard 200 at #182. Three singles have been released off the album — "All That Matters", "Sticking with You" and "Hope Now".
Stories is the second album from Christian rock band Addison Road. It was released on June 22, 2010, under INO Records. A music video for "This Little Light of Mine" was released by Addison Road on GodTube.com (formerly tangle.com). The album received positive reception and commercial success.
Addison Road, London, a road in London, England Addison Road railway station (England), an Underground and Overground station more commonly called Kensington (Olympia) station; Addison Road, Marrickville, a road in the inner-western Sydney suburb of Marrickville, Australia; Addison Road station, a Washington Metro station in Prince George's ...
Jennifer Ann Simmons (born November 17, 1980, née, Chisolm), known professionally as Jenny Simmons, is an American Christian music artist, formerly of the band Addison Road. [ 3 ] Early life
"God Only Knows" is a song by the American rock band the Beach Boys from their 1966 album Pet Sounds. Written by Brian Wilson and Tony Asher, it is a baroque-style love song distinguished for its harmonic innovation and complexity, unusual instrumentation, and subversion of typical popular music conventions, both lyrically and musically.
As with most of the songs on his Living in the Material World album, George Harrison wrote "Give Me Love (Give Me Peace on Earth)" over 1971–72. [4] During this period, he dedicated himself to assisting refugees of the Bangladesh Liberation War, [5] by staging two all-star benefit concerts in New York and preparing a live album and concert film for release. [6]
The lyrics gauge Starr's relationships with his bandmates according to how likely each one was to make music with him in the future. [ 20 ] [ 21 ] In author Andrew Grant Jackson's view, the verses suggest a group dynamic similar to the opening scene of the Beatles' 1964 film A Hard Day's Night , when Starr, Lennon and Harrison are seen sharing ...