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Kukeri dancing in Kalipetrovo. Kukeri is a divinity personifying fecundity. Sometimes in Bulgaria and Serbia it is a plural divinity. In Bulgaria, a ritual spectacle of spring (a sort of carnival) takes place after a scenario of folk theatre, in which Kuker's role is interpreted by a man attired in a sheep- or goat-pelt, wearing a horned mask and girded with a large wooden phallus.
The Jerky Boys (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is the original soundtrack album of the 1995 James Melkonian's film The Jerky Boys: The Movie. It was released on January 24, 1995, via Select/Atlantic Records.
Several songs that are heard during the movie, such as "Total State Machine" by Test Dept, "Omgyjya Switch7" by Aphex Twin, "Anti War Dub" by Digital Mystikz, "War Dub" by Pinch and "Life in a Glasshouse" by Radiohead are not included on the soundtrack.
The Fabulous Baker Boys is an album by American pianist Dave Grusin released in 1989, recorded for the GRP label. This album is the soundtrack to the motion picture The Fabulous Baker Boys directed by Steve Kloves. The album reached No. 3 on Billboard's Jazz chart.
"Solway Firth" is a song by American heavy metal band Slipknot. Produced by Greg Fidelman , it was released on July 22, 2019, as the second single from their sixth album, We Are Not Your Kind . The song's music video was directed by the band's percussionist Shawn "Clown" Crahan and features footage from the Amazon Prime Video series The Boys .
Stylistically reminiscent of the hit theme song from Connie Francis' prior film Where the Boys Are, which song had been a Neil Sedaka/ Howard Greenfield co-write, "Follow the Boys" was in fact written by Benny Davis and Murray Mencher (using the pseudonym Ted Murry), veteran songwriters who had been signed to Francis' own music publishing firm Francon Music since 1961, notably writing Francis ...
"Water Runs Dry" is a song by American vocal harmony group Boyz II Men, written and produced by Babyface. [1] The single, the fourth released from the album II, reached number two in the United States and number four in Canada.
The film was pulled out of theatres a day before its release, owing to the ban by the Punjab government and the Central Board of Film Censors. [4] [7] Pakistani celebrities such as Iqra Aziz, Ali Rehman Khan and Osman Khalid Butt came out in the support of the makers and protested against the ban.