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"I Can Hear the Grass Grow " is the second single by the Move, written by Roy Wood. [5] The song was first released on 31 March 1967, and reached number 5 in the UK Singles Chart on 10 May 1967, staying for ten weeks in the charts. [6] "I Can Hear the Grass Grow" was the second of a string of four consecutive top-5 singles in the UK. [7]
NME called it "more fun than watching a wombat in a washing machine" [2] and named it the 10th best album of the year. In 1998, Q readers voted it the 68th greatest album of all time, [ 3 ] while in 2000 the same magazine placed it at number 57 in its list of the 100 Greatest British Albums Ever.
Three days later, Nothing More's new album title, Spirits, was revealed alongside its title track. Set for release on October 14, [54] another song from the record, "You Don't Know What Love Means", was released in advance of the album in mid-August. [55] On January 19, 2024, Nothing More released a non-album single "If It Doesn't Hurt". [56]
"Wildwood Weed" is a 1964 country-western parody song written by Don Bowman. It was the first track of Bowman's debut album, Our Man in Trouble..."It Only Hurts When I Laugh" , under RCA Victor . Its most famous version was recorded in 1974 by Jim Stafford and became the fourth of four U.S. Top 40 singles from his eponymous debut album .
Sinsemilla cannabis is a cultivation technique, so it should not be confused with skunk, which refers to strains with a high percentage of THC, of up to 34% THC content. [6] The expression sinsemilla is practically obsolete since feminized seeds emerged in the 1990s, seeds genetically modified to only sprout females.
"Where Grass Won't Grow" is a song by American country music singer George Jones. It was written by Earl "Peanut" Montgomery, one of Jones' favorite songwriters, and tells the story of the hardships faced by a family living on a twelve-acre farm in south Tennessee .
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"A Thousand Shadows" (sometimes written "1000 Shadows") is a song by American rock group The Seeds, written by vocalist Sky Saxon, keyboardist Daryl Hooper, and guitarist Jan Savage. Produced by Marcus Tybalt, it was released as a single in 1967 and peaked at number 72 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart.