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"Starting Over" carries a "raw, stripped down and vulnerable" theme, [3] with Stapleton singing of looking for new horizons, in "perpetual motion". [2] The love song fuses acoustic guitar chords and a percussive shake, [5] while drummer Derek Mixon delivers a "brushed" snare rhythm, which Rolling Stone ' s Joseph Hudak said evokes Willie Nelson's version of "City of New Orleans".
"New Horizons" is the album's first single and was released in the iTunes Store on August 21. However, the song made its radio debut on Windsor, Ontario rock station 89X on August 1. [ 12 ] According to bassist Pat Seals, the song is about "a feeling of looking toward the unknown future with hope."
Tony Cummings of Cross Rhythms described the track as a "condensed but powerfully building version of the Housefires' "The Way (New Horizon)"." [9] Joshua Andre of 365 Days of Inspiring Media gave a positive opinion of the song, saying "Debut radio single "The Way (New Horizons)", though lyrically a bit cliché, is enjoyable nonetheless, as this energetic guitar led mid-tempo pop melody ...
New Horizons was released in March 1978 on Monument Records. It was the thirty second studio album of Smith's career. It was distributed as both a vinyl LP and a cassette, containing five songs on each side of the discs. Both had identical track listings. [5] [8] Three singles were part of the album.
Today, though, none of that matters, because I want to talk about Pokémon Horizons’ music — specifically, its opening theme song. Horizons’ first story arc had an absolute banger as a theme ...
A contrafact is a musical composition built using the chord progression of a pre-existing song, but with a new melody and arrangement. Typically the original tune's progression and song form will be reused but occasionally just a section will be reused in the new composition. The term comes from classical music and was first applied to jazz by ...
In Kevin Costner’s first installment of his four-part epic Horizon: An American Saga, bands of settlers head west in search of a so-called promised land, where they can park their wagons and set ...
New Horizons (1978) Free Bop! (1978) New Horizons is an album by saxophonist Charles McPherson which was recorded in 1977 and released on the Xanadu label. [1] [2]