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"Ship of Fools" (subtitled "Save Me from Tomorrow" [1]) is a rock song by World Party released as a second single from the 1987 debut album Private Revolution. It was written and produced by singer and multi-instrumentalist Karl Wallinger, formerly of The Waterboys. Wallinger was the sole member of World Party at the time of release. [2]
"Ship of Fools" is a rock song performed by English rock singer Robert Plant. It was the third single released from his 1988 album Now and Zen, following "Heaven Knows" and "Tall Cool One". It reached number 76 on the UK singles chart, number 84 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 3 on the Billboard Mainstream Rock chart. It was Plant's tenth ...
Captain Sad and His Ship of Fools "Poor Baby" b/w "Meet Me at the Wishing Well" (from Captain Sad and His Ship Of Fools) MGM 13981: 44: 47: 22: The Best of the Cowsills "The Path of Love" b/w "Captain Sad and His Ship of Fools" MGM 14003: 132: 71: Captain Sad and His Ship of Fools "The Impossible Years" b/w "The Candy Kid" (from All-Time Hits ...
"Ship of Fools" is a song by English synth-pop duo Erasure, released in February 1988 by Mute as the lead single from their third studio album, The Innocents (1988). [3] The song was written by Vince Clarke and Andy Bell , and produced by Stephen Hague and Dave Jacob. [ 4 ]
All songs written by Karl Wallinger except "Dance of the Hoppy Lads", written by Wallinger with Stephen Wickham, and "All I Really Want to Do", written by Bob Dylan. "Private Revolution" – 4:01 "Making Love (To the World)" – 2:30 "Ship of Fools" – 4:27 "All Come True" – 5:52 "Dance of the Hoppy Lads" – 0:44
"Ship of Fools" was also featured on the final two-hour episode of Miami Vice, "Freefall". It is the musical accompaniment to Crockett and Tubbs return to Miami via motor yacht after rescuing General Bourbon (a thinly veiled Manuel Noriega -type character) from the fictional Central American nation of Costa Morada.
The album's first single "Ship of Fools", reached a modest number 42 in the British charts but did much better outside the UK – it reached No. 4 in Australia, No. 21 in New Zealand, and No. 27 in the US, in the process becoming the act's only major international hit. "Private Revolution" was also issued as a single, but only charted in the UK ...
Her debut solo vocal was a song called "Ask the Children", featured in the Cowsills' third MGM album, Captain Sad And His Ship Of Fools. Her contribution to the Cowsills' backing vocals made her, upon her ninth birthday, the youngest person to be directly involved in a top ten hit record [ 1 ] when " Indian Lake " made the Top 10 in the early ...