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"Bright Eyes" is a song written by British songwriter Mike Batt and performed by Art Garfunkel. It was written for the soundtrack of the 1978 British animated adventure drama film Watership Down . Rearranged as a pop song from its original form in the film, the track appears on British and European versions of Garfunkel's 1979 Fate for ...
The "ship" referred to in the song is an aircraft; the scene in Bright Eyes where the song appears takes place on a taxiing American Airlines Douglas DC-2. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] 400,000 copies of the sheet music, published by Sam Fox Publishing Company , were sold, [ 5 ] and one recording by Mae Questel (the cartoon voice of Betty Boop and Olive Oyl ...
"Easy/Lucky/Free" is a single by the band Bright Eyes from their album Digital Ash in a Digital Urn. It was released July 25, 2005. The music video features Conor Oberst entering a room, and then writing the lyrics and drawings on a transparent wall as the song plays. "Easy/Lucky/Free" is featured in the 2008 Mexican film Voy a Explotar.
Imaginations from the Other Side is the fifth studio album by the German power metal band Blind Guardian, released in 1995.The atmosphere of this album is darker in comparison to their earlier works, such as Battalions of Fear, which had a relatively light tone.
"Lover I Don't Have to Love" is a song by Bright Eyes released as a single in 2002 and released on the album Lifted or The Story Is in the Soil, Keep Your Ear to the Ground. The music video is karaoke with sing-along lyrics and different ambiences in the background.
Lifted or The Story Is in the Soil, Keep Your Ear to the Ground is the fourth studio album by Bright Eyes and the 46th release of Saddle Creek Records.The band made its national television debut in support of the album, performing "The Trees Get Wheeled Away" (a track that was not on the album) on the Late Show with David Letterman.
Influence. St. Vincent: There are moments on, say, a song from my last record called “Broken Man,” where at the end, there's these saxes coming in and they're doing these stabs and the stabs ...
"White Lightning" is a song written by J. P. Richardson, best known by his stage name, the Big Bopper. After recording the song himself in 1958, it was recorded by American country music artist George Jones and released as a single in February 1959. On April 13, 1959, Jones' version was the first number-one single of his career.