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"Once in a Lifetime" is a song by the American new wave band Talking Heads, produced and cowritten by Brian Eno. It was released in January 1981 through Sire Records as the lead single from the band's fourth studio album, Remain in Light (1980).
"Once in a Lifetime" is a song co-written and recorded by Australian country music artist Keith Urban. It was released in August 2006 as the first single from his 2006 album Love, Pain & the Whole Crazy Thing.
"Once in a Lifetime" borrows heavily from preachers' diatribes. [50] While some critics deemed the song "a kind of prescient jab at the excesses of the 1980s", Byrne disagreed with this categorization and commented that its lyrics were meant to be taken literally: "We're largely unconscious.
"In Our Lifetime" is a song by Scottish pop rock band Texas. The first single from their fifth studio album, The Hush (1999), it was released on 12 April 1999 in Europe and on 19 April 1999 in the United Kingdom.
Once in a Lifetime, based on the play by Kaufman and Hart, starring Jack Oakie Once in a Lifetime , a 1984 TV special by Talking Heads, also known as "Talking Heads vs. Television" Once in a Lifetime (1994 film) , a TV film based on a novel by Danielle Steele (see below)
What researchers are calling a "Once-in-a-lifetime event," is a nova, or explosion, between two suns 3,000 lightyears away.
Rikyū's apprentice Yamanoue Sōji instructs in Yamanoue Sōji Ki to give respect to your host "as though it were a meeting that could occur only once in the lifetime" (一期に一度の会のように, ichigo ni ichido no e no yō ni). [3] Ichigo (一期) is a Buddhist term meaning "from one's birth to death", i.e. one's lifetime.
The lyrics are told from the point of view of someone involved in clandestine activities in the U.S. (the cities Houston, Detroit, and Pittsburgh are mentioned) during some sort of civil unrest or dystopian environment. [8] The line "This ain't no Mudd Club or CBGB" refers to two New York music venues at which the band performed in the 1970s. [8]