Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The song was released as the fifth and final single from the album. "Where the River Flows" peaked at number one on the US Billboard Mainstream Rock chart, becoming the band's fourth single to do so. The song became a top-40 hit in Canada, peaking at number 39 on the RPM 100 Hit Tracks chart.
"Kawa no nagare no yō ni" (川の流れのように, "Like the Flow of the River") is the last single recorded by Japanese enka singer Hibari Misora, as she died soon after its release in 1989. It was composed by Akira Mitake, with lyrics by Yasushi Akimoto. [2] The single charted at 8th place for more than a year [3] and sold 225,000 copies ...
Red River Valley (song) Rien que de l'eau; River (AKB48 song) The River (Delta Goodrem song) The River (Jordan Feliz song) River (Bishop Briggs song) River (Eminem song) The River (Garth Brooks song) River (Joni Mitchell song) River Deep – Mountain High; River Lea (song) The River of Dreams; River Song (Dennis Wilson song) River Song (Sherman)
"The River and the Highway" is a song written by Gerry House and Don Schlitz, and recorded by American country music artist Pam Tillis. It was released in January 1996 as the second single from the album All of This Love. The song reached number 8 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart. [1]
Paperback, 534 pages. ISBN 9780520227354 (as part of a series of literature pieces set in California) - the book had been out of print for many years when this was released. Library of America hardcover edition, 2019, 800 pages. ISBN 9781598536034 Features new excerpts from the Kesh novel Dangerous People and other new material.
"Find the River" is a song by American rock band R.E.M., released on November 29, 1993, by Warner Bros., as the sixth and final single from the band's eighth album, Automatic for the People (1992). The song reached number 54 on the UK Singles Charts in December 1993. [2] It did not chart in the US. [3] "Find the River" was one of only three R.E ...
A book entitled, Don't Push the River (It Flows by Itself) by Barry Stevens about her use of Gestalt therapy was published in 1970. [2] Morrison admitted—that "aside from 'flashes of Ireland'—the song had 'other flashes on other kinds of people. I was also reading a couple of books at the time ... [there's] a bit of Gestalt theory in it, too."
Musically, The River is a heartland rock and rock and roll record with a live garage-band sound, combining party songs with introspective ballads. The lyrics expand on the themes of Springsteen's previous albums Born to Run (1975) and Darkness on the Edge of Town (1978) and mainly focus on love, marriage, and family.