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"Engel" (German for "Angel" or "Angels") is a song by German Industrial metal band Rammstein. It was released in April 1997 as the first single from their second album, Sehnsucht . The female part of song's chorus is sung by Christiane "Bobo" Hebold of the German pop band Bobo in White Wooden Houses .
Joel Engel (also Yoel or Yury, Russian: Юлий Дмитриевич (Йоэль) Энгель, Yuliy Dmitrievich (Yoel) Engel, 1868–1927) was a Russian [1] [2] music critic, composer and one of the leading figures in the Jewish art music movement.
Engel (band), a Swedish industrial/melodic death metal band "Engel" (song), a 1997 song by Rammstein "Engel", a 2014 song by Admiral P featuring Nico D "Engel", a 2012 song from the album Raise Your Fist by Doro
The music was attributed to "W. M.". According to some websites, [ 3 ] the hymn is by the nineteenth-century Wilfrid Moreau from Poitiers. "Angels We Have Heard on High" is the most-common English version, an 1862 paraphrase by James Chadwick [ citation needed ] , the Roman Catholic Bishop of Hexham and Newcastle , northeast England.
Musical symbols are marks and symbols in musical notation that indicate various aspects of how a piece of music is to be performed. There are symbols to communicate information about many musical elements, including pitch, duration, dynamics, or articulation of musical notes; tempo, metre, form (e.g., whether sections are repeated), and details about specific playing techniques (e.g., which ...
The music video for "There Must Be an Angel" was directed by Jörn Heitmann and filmed near the General-Steinhof-Kaserne at the Gatow Airport in Berlin-Spandau, Germany, on 19 July 2001. [52] Inspired by Tony Scott 's 1986 film Top Gun , the clip features the quintet as fighter pilots of the fictional US military squadron 68 at an also ...
“We don’t have to vote.”
[10] Composer and conductor Lehman Engel wrote that the song "has a cowboy flavor", and commented that "In the lyric, its folk quality is accentuated." Engel concluded that "Lerner has invented an interesting kind of narration". [11] Princeton University historian Robert V. Wells wrote that it is "a sad and wistful song about being far from ...