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"Cool the Engines" is a song written by Tom Scholz, Brad Delp and Fran Sheehan that was originally released on Boston's 1986 album Third Stage.In the US it was also released as a 12" promotional single backed with another song from Third Stage, "The Launch," and as the B-side to the third commercially released single from the album, "Can'tcha Say (You Believe in Me)/Still in Love."
Third Stage is the third studio album by the American rock band Boston, released on September 24, 1986, on MCA Records, as the band's first album on the label. [5] It was recorded at Boston co-founder Tom Scholz's Hideaway Studio over a long, strained, six-year period "between floods and power failures". [6]
[1] "Can'tcha Say (You Believe in Me)" Tom Scholz Gerry Green Brad Delp: Third Stage: 1986 [1] "Cool the Engines" Tom Scholz Fran Sheehan Brad Delp: Third Stage: 1986 [1] "Corporate America" Tom Scholz Corporate America: 2002 [2] "Cryin'" Anton Cosmo: Corporate America: 2002 [2] "Didn't Mean to Fall in Love" [a] Tom Scholz Curly Smith Janet ...
Greatest Hits is a compilation album by American rock band Boston.Released on June 3, 1997, the album features songs originally released on both the Epic and MCA record labels, as well as three previously unreleased recordings ("Tell Me", "Higher Power" and "The Star-Spangled Banner").
Corporate America is the fifth studio album by American hard rock band Boston, released in 2002.It is the first album to feature band members Anton Cosmo and Kimberley Dahme, the last album released in vocalist Brad Delp's lifetime (though he would posthumously appear on the band's following album Life, Love & Hope), the second and final album with vocalist Fran Cosmo, and the only album ...
Passengers in the 35-second video react in disbelief as they watch the two planes slowly get closer to each other, collide and then halt with no visible major damage. “It hit the other plane.
The song was covered by WaveGroup Sound as part of the soundtrack for the original Guitar Hero released in 2005, [55] and later released as a master recording on Guitar Hero Smash Hits and Guitar Hero Live ' s GHTV. The song was made available to download on March 1, 2011, for use in the Rock Band music video game series. [56]
Boston Phoenix critic Milo Miles criticizes "Can'tcha Say (You Believe in Me)" as "tedium." [9] He singles out the line "Where there's a will there's a way" as an example of the song's "prosaic, cliched lyrics." [9] However, Billboard regarded the song as one of the "best bets" to follow up on the success of the #1 single from Third Stage ...