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The Ties That Bind: The River Collection is a box set by the American singer-songwriter Bruce Springsteen.Released on December 4, 2015, the collection is an expanded edition of his 1980 album The River, containing 52 tracks on four CDs along with four hours of video on three DVDs or two Blu-ray discs.
Like much of the Tunnel of Love album, "Spare Parts" was recorded in Springsteen's home studio, called Thrill Hill East, between January and May 1987 with several members of the E Street Band. [3] The song has one of the largest backing bands on the album.
The Mens Room radio show began in Baltimore when program director Bill Pasha assembled current hosts Miles Montgomery and Steve Hill for a talk-based radio program called Out To Lunch, [citation needed] which ran from 2003-2005 on WXYV-FM with those hosts after Miles replaced Bill Rohland in October 2003. [2]
To her, "Today Is Your Day" became the theme song for the series, expressing the purpose behind it via music. Despite feeling apprehensive, Twain decided to record the track, which induced her to create her forthcoming fifth studio album. The track is a midtempo ballad in the country pop genre. Lyrically, "Today Is Your Day" regards personal ...
The release was announced on September 10, with a music video for the lead single "Letter to You" published simultaneously. [5] Streaming audio and a music video for "Ghosts" followed on September 24. [18] A documentary on making the album directed by Thom Zimny came out via Apple TV+ on October 23. [13]
The music video for "War" was taken from the concert where it was recorded, while the video for "Fire" was from a completely unrelated 1986 acoustic performance at a Bridge School Benefit concert. A third video, for "Born to Run", was also released, which showed a melange of clips from the band's 1984–85 Born in the U.S.A. Tour.
In a new video posted in honor of the "Breathe" songstress' 56th birthday, Hill's eldest daughter with husband Tim McGraw, Gracie, shared a rare clip of all four women of the family singing ...
It has been described as a song about the "beauty and joy of being in a band and the pain of losing one another to illness and time". [3] [4] Besides being a salute to lost bandmates and a love letter to rock, Rolling Stone describes "Ghosts" as a probable future live favorite when concerts resume, and sounding like a "revved-up version of rockers from The River, such as "Two Hearts". [5]