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The Rare, the Raw and the Rest is a 1999 compilation album by British hard rock band Thunder. [2] It is a collection of b-sides, [1] studio out-takes and live tracks recorded during the time that the band was signed to EMI Records, many of which were either unreleased or were unavailable on CD prior to their inclusion on this compilation.
All tracks written by Alec Ounsworth, except where noted. "Some Loud Thunder" "Emily Jean Stock" "Mama, Won't You Keep Them Castles in the Air and Burning?" "Love Song No. 7" "Satan Said Dance" "Upon Encountering the Crippled Elephant" "Goodbye to Mother and the Cove" (Ounsworth, Tyler Sargent, Sean Greenhalgh) "Arm and Hammer" "Yankee Go Home"
The Welcome Fire is the eighth studio album by Australian singer Wendy Matthews, released on 13 August 2013.It is Matthews' first original album in 12 years. She co-wrote tracks along with Josh Pyke, Megan Washington, Mark Sholtez, Rod McCormack, John Castle, Kim Richey, Anthony Egizii and David Musumeci.
As part of the promotion, every Wendy's kids' meal, which features a choice of 4-piece chicken nuggets or a hamburger or cheeseburger with a junior fry or apple bites and a kid's drink, also comes ...
Sure, Wendy’s burger patties aren’t the height of culinary wonder, but the addition of melty cheese keeps this classic double cheeseburger above the Jr. Hamburger. Cheapism Price: $1.39
Wendy Melvoin's twin sister Susannah and Cole Ynda, Lisa's sister, contributed background vocal work to the record (as well as touring extensively with their sisters at the time) with k. d. lang adding background vocals to "Mother of Pearl".
The summer season is in full effect across the United States, and millions of people have already felt the effects of a heat dome, a phenomenon that acts like nature's oven. A heat dome is a ...
Deuces Wild is a film that desperately wants to be a music video circa 1983. All that's missing from its absurdly stagy scenes of gang warfare on the streets of Brooklyn in 1958 is the pounding screech of Michael Jackson's Beat It. The music we get instead is a tepid rock score by Stewart Copeland spiced with mostly obscure grade-B oldies-but ...