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"Walking on the Milky Way" is a song by English electronic band Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark (OMD). It was released as a single on 5 August 1996 and appeared on their Universal album a month later. The song reached number 17 on the UK Singles Chart, becoming the group's first UK top-20 hit in over five years, and their last UK top-40 single.
"Milky Way" is a song by Syd Barrett from the outtakes/rarities album Opel. [1] The song was recorded on 7 June 1970, [ 1 ] and produced by Barrett's friend and former bandmate David Gilmour . [ 2 ] It was one of eight then-unreleased tracks to be released on Opel .
The song says that we are "thirty thousand light years from galactic central point", again correct to within one significant figure of 25,000 light years from the centre of the Milky Way. [12] The song also states that the galaxy is "a hundred thousand light years side to side".
Sheet music for "Under the Milky Way" was published by Hal Leonard. In October 2010, the Church's Starfish was listed in the top 40 in the book, 100 Best Australian Albums. [29] The authors, John O'Donnell, Toby Creswell and Craig Mathieson, described "Under the Milky Way" as "[The Church's] signature track ... [which] caught them at their peak ...
Donnie Darko: Music from the Original Motion Picture Score is a soundtrack album by American musician Michael Andrews, released in April 2002 on Enjoy and Everloving Records. It contains music from the 2001 science fiction psychological thriller film Donnie Darko , written and directed by Richard Kelly .
"Under the Milky Way" was also featured in the 2001 film Donnie Darko. The song "Reptile" was used in Toy Machine's skateboarding video Suffer the Joy. A sheet music/guitar tablature book was released for the entire album by Cherry Lane. In October 2010, it was listed in the top 40 in the book, 100 Best Australian Albums. [13]
"Milky White Way" is a gospel standard written by Lander Coleman, who was a quartet singer for the Coleman Brothers. The song became a million-selling hit record in 1947 when the CBS Trumpeteers, a black quartet from Baltimore, recorded it. In the late 1940s the CBS Trumpeteers had a popular morning radio show over the CBS network called 7:15 A ...
The song is composed in the key of A♭ Major with a tempo of 98 beat-per-minute. [11] The song was produced and written by Kenzie, who worked on the original song, and arranged the song herself to recreate it into a "fresh jazz pop" song. [12] Lyrically, the song tells a story of unfolding a "dark night" with someone just like a "milky way". [13]