Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
She was a close friend of Xiao-Tong and is now married to Bo-Cang. Allen Chen as Lan Yi-Cong: One of the members of the mountain-climbing club in high school. Son of a wealthy businessman and was Xiao-Tong's boyfriend.
The song is featured in the film The Abominable Dr. Phibes (1971), during a murder scene, and in the 1996 BBC TV detective series The Mrs Bradley Mysteries, which starred Diana Rigg. The song was the end of transmission tune of Radio MonteCarlo in the 1960s.
Oliver deemed the highlight "Close Your Eyes" "with its Stereolab-esque layers of voices and organs." [ 5 ] Shane Gilchrist from the Otago Daily Times gave the album 3 and a half out of 5, saying the album has "peaks and plateaus", praising Kanye West 's "Wolves", The Meters ' "What'cha Say" and Nick Drake 's "Things Behind the Sun".
Close Your Eyes (Kurt Elling album), 1995; Close Your Eyes (Sarah McKenzie album), 2012; Close Your Eyes (Stacey Kent album), 1997; Close Your Eyes: A Collection 1965–1986, by Vincent Crane, 2008; Close Your Eyes, or the title song (see below), by Edward Bear, 1973; Close Your Eyes, by Ellie Drennan, 2015; Close Your Eyes EP, by Close Your ...
It was the lead single released from their fourth and final studio album, Close Your Eyes and was the biggest hit from the LP. The song was written by Larry Evoy, and was a sequel to their best-known hit, "Last Song". "Close Your Eyes" spent 12 weeks on the U.S. charts, and peaked at number 37 on the Billboard Hot 100.
Close Your Eyes is the debut studio album by Kurt Elling, released in 1995. [ 1 ] At the 38th Grammy Awards Elling was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Jazz Vocal Performance for Close Your Eyes .
McKenzie told Australian Jazz that she sits down at the piano with a larger selection of songs she’d like to work with and to 'see what happens'. She said she chooses songs that she 'loves or that have special significance' and the end result is Close Your Eyes; a group of songs that she wanted to release. There is a mix of jazz standards ...
The song received a favorable review from Taste of Country, which said that "this love song is easy to embrace, and even easier to sing along with." [2] Bobby Peacock of Roughstock gave the song four stars out of five, calling it "more detailed than most other songs that tread the same ground" while adding that "lead singer Matt Thomas has a subtle vocal delivery with a hint of Dierks Bentley ...