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"Throwing Stones" is a song by the Grateful Dead. It appears on their 1987 album In the Dark. [1] It was also released as a single, with a B-side of "When Push Comes to Shove". [2] The song is based loosely on the nursery rhyme Ring Around the Rosie. The song repeatedly mentions the line Ashes! Ashes! We all fall down!.
The cover shows Joel poised to throw a rock through the two-story window of his real-life waterfront glass house in Cove Neck. On some versions, the back cover shows Joel looking through the hole that the rock made in the glass. This alludes to the adage that "people in glass houses shouldn't throw stones". [citation needed]
In the Dark is the twelfth studio album (nineteenth overall) by the Grateful Dead.It was recorded in January 1987, and released on July 6, 1987. In the Dark was the band's first album in six years, and its first studio album since 1980's Go to Heaven.
Bonnie Dodd was a steel guitar player who wrote Tex Ritter's 1945 hit "You Will Have to Pay" and had been recording herself since 1937. [2] The cautionary "Be Careful of Stones that You Throw" was in the tradition of moralizing recitations that Williams was releasing under the Luke the Drifter name; the song recounts the heroic act of a young lady who is killed while saving a child from a ...
The little boy's mother was going off to the market. She worried about her son, who was always up to some mischief. She sternly admonished him, "Be good. Don't get into trouble. Don't eat all the chocolate. Don't spill all the milk. Don't throw stones at the cow. Don't fall down the well." The boy had done all of these things on previous market ...
Mick Jagger has explained the hidden meaning behind Hackney Diamonds, the name of the upcoming album from The Rolling Stones. At a launch event in London on Wednesday 6 September, host Jimmy ...
This Fire is the second studio album by American singer-songwriter Paula Cole, released on October 15, 1996.According to the RIAA, the album has gone double platinum, selling over two million copies in United States [3] and peaked at number 20 on the Billboard 200. [4]
Upon the release of Drake‘s seventh studio album, Honestly, Nevermind, the rapper’s 21 Savage collaboration “Jimmy Cooks” blasted to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 songs chart dated July 2 ...