Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
help. Music video. "Ride" on YouTube. " Ride " is a song written and recorded by American musical duo Twenty One Pilots, from their fourth studio album, Blurryface. "Ride" was originally released as a promotional single on YouTube on May 11, 2015. [2] The music video for the song was released on YouTube the following day. [3]
Never Let Me Down Again. " Never Let Me Down Again " is a song by the English electronic music band Depeche Mode. It was released as the second single from their sixth studio album, Music for the Masses (1987), on 24 August 1987. It reached No. 22 in the UK, No. 2 in West Germany, and the top-10 in several other European countries such as ...
4:58. Label. Asylum Records. Producer (s) Don Felder. " Heavy Metal (Takin' a Ride) " is a song by Eagles guitarist Don Felder with lead vocals sung by Don Felder with backing vocals sung by Timothy B. Schmit and Don Henley. It is the theme song of the animated film Heavy Metal, not to be confused with the song of the same title by Sammy Hagar ...
Vanity Fare singles chronology. "Early in the Morning". (1969) " Hitchin' a Ride ". (1969) "Come Tomorrow". (1970) " Hitchin' a Ride " is a song written by Mitch Murray and Peter Callander issued as a single by the English pop/rock band Vanity Fare in late 1969. It reached number 16 on the UK Singles Chart in February 1970 but was a bigger hit ...
"The Ride" is a song recorded by American country singer-songwriter David Allan Coe. It was released in February 1983 as the lead single from the album, Castles in the Sand. The song spent 19 weeks on the Billboard country singles charts, reaching a peak of number four and peaked at number two on the Canadian RPM Country Tracks chart.
A train song is a song referencing passenger or freight railroads, often using a syncopated beat resembling the sound of train wheels over train tracks.Trains have been a theme in both traditional and popular music since the first half of the 19th century and over the years have appeared in nearly all musical genres, including folk, blues, country, rock, jazz, world, classical and avant-garde.
Reed and three of the people he has said he described in his lyrics: Holly Woodlawn, Jackie Curtis and Joe Dallesandro In the 2001 documentary Classic Albums: Lou Reed: Transformer, Reed says that it was Nelson Algren's 1956 novel, A Walk on the Wild Side (itself titled after the 1952 song "The Wild Side of Life"), [13] that was the launching point for the song, even though, as it grew, the ...
Oh! wait for the wagon and we'll all take a ride. Oh! wait for the wagon and we'll all take a ride. (First verse) Will you come with me my Phillis dear, to yon blue mountain free, Where the blossoms smell the sweetest, come rove along with me. It's ev'ry sunday morning when I am by your side, We'll jump into the Wagon, and all take a ride.