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The lyric video of the song was released on December 14, 2018. It features the Chainsmokers and Winona Oak "laying on the floor covered in colorful flashing lights". Oak, being "the main focus of the video", appears wearing a "tan trench coat and red flannel shirt". [6] [7]
The official music video, released on the same day as the song, was directed by NF and Patrick Tohill. It opens with NF stranded on a wooden raft in the middle of an ocean and in an all-white outfit, [1] [2] [5] rapping as he finds his way to the shore. Later, a clone of himself clothed entirely in black misguides NF around the island before ...
The song was released on February 21, 2018, as a promotional single for X's upcoming sophomore studio album, ?, which would be released on March 16, 2018.The song, dedicated to those who died in and survived the Parkland shooting, speaks of subject of survivor's guilt that may be experienced by those who survived the shooting, with X singing, "she keep cryin', she keep cryin' every single ...
In October 2018, Minogue and Savoretti both teased at the song's music video, posting stills on social media. [2] [3] A day later, Minogue announced the song as the fifth and final single from Golden, with the radio edit of the song premiering on 13 October 2018 on BBC Radio 2. [4] The song has been described as a country-tinged ballad. [1]
The phrase is popular enough in its association with Joe Hill and the labour movement that it was the title of a music compilation made in 1990 and released by Smithsonian Folkways. The full title is Don't Mourn — Organize!: Songs of Labor Songwriter Joe Hill.
Aretha Franklin recorded a live version of the song for her 1972 album Amazing Grace. An a cappella version by Take 6, simply called "Mary", received wide airplay after appearing on the group's eponymous debut album in 1988. The song is sung briefly at the beginning of the music video for Bone Thugs N Harmony's 1996 "Tha Crossroads".
The song received a music video, released less than a month later on November 9, 2021. The video contains clips from archival videos of United States Military soldiers, and features Gilbert in a cemetery in order to pay his respects for the fallen soldiers. The video is mostly shot in black and white to maintain a somber approach. [4]
Hope is the second album by the Canadian rock band Klaatu and their first concept album. Released in September 1977, it won a Juno Award for "Best Engineered Album" and a Canadian Music Critics award for "Best Album" that same year. The album follows the loose concept of space travelers visiting a distant planet.