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"Airport" is a single by English power pop/new wave band the Motors. Released on 19 May 1978 by Virgin Records, [3] the song reached number four on the UK Singles Chart. [1] [4] [5] On 1 July 1978, the single was awarded a silver certification by the BPI in the UK for sales of over 250,000 units.
But there is a sense of bustling and coming and going and the grand emotion of that middle section of what airports can be. In our lives, airports were rich with symbolism. Departures and comings and goings; departures and arrivals. Separations and meetings. That was kind of woven into the song.
Small planes at Manassas Regional Airport. An airport for Manassas was proposed in 1930, when the mayor was Harry P. Davis. [4] It was built in 1931 on 94 acres (0.38 km 2) [5] along Virginia Route 234, in the area now known as Manaport Shopping Center.
According to LAX, the song "LA International Airport" climbed to No. 9 on the U.S. country music chart and No. 54 on the pop chart in the early 1970s.
It was named after Douglas Cochrane, 12th Earl of Dundonald, who was the last British officer to command the Canadian militia. In June 2003, the City of Ottawa [1] and in April 2004, the Canadian federal government [2] put up memorial plaques in Dundonald Park commemorating the Soviet defector, Igor Gouzenko.
"Until It's Gone" is described to be an alternative rock, [6] electronic rock [7] and gothic rock [8] song. Lyrically, the song is about a failed relationship lead vocalist Chester Bennington has been in. AltWire explains it as a "beginning with a synth line similar to 'Numb' from the 2003 album Meteora, taking a sharp turn to an unexpected brooding goth rock anthem, proving to be one of the ...
"Airport Song" is the debut single by Guster, from their second album Goldfly. It also appears on the live CD and DVD Guster on Ice. [1] "Airport Song" received modest radio airplay, peaking at No. 35 on the Billboard Modern Rock chart. [citation needed]
"Points of Authority" is a song by American rock band Linkin Park. It is the fourth track on their first studio album, Hybrid Theory. The song was released in 2001 as a promo release. A CD single for the song was set to be released in the UK in September 2001, but instead, "Papercut" was released as the third single from the album. It was later ...