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The courtyard of Itum Bahal near where Rajamati lived. The water spout of Maruhiti where Rajamati famously fell flat on her back. "Rājamati" (Nepali: राजमति) is a traditional Nepalese ballad about an unsuccessful love quest, and is the most well known song in Newar society of Nepal. [1] Written by Seturam, this song was composed in ...
"The View from the Afternoon" was expected to have been the band's third single, following UK number ones "I Bet You Look Good on the Dancefloor" and "When the Sun Goes Down", but the band announced in March 2006 that its next record would be a five-track EP, [2] which thereby disqualified it from being listed in the UK Singles Chart and UK Albums Chart [3] because it was too long to be a ...
He has lived in "Youfeng Xiaoyuan" for a year. He is a passionate and humorous inspiration seeker. As a resident of Youfeng Courtyard, he is often misunderstood by the residents of the Courtyard because of his enthusiastic personality, but after getting along with him, everyone realized that he is actually a very righteous and gentlemanly person .
[11] The song was a late inclusion on NME 's "20 Essential Pop Punk Tracks Everyone Should Know" list. [4] It was featured on Fuse's "14 Best Pop-Punk One-Hit Wonders", and the channel called the song "self-deprecating and catchy". [5] "My Own Worst Enemy" appeared on the Phoenix New Times "10 Best Pop-Punk Songs of All Time" list. [12]
The song tells a story about the Devil's failure to gain a young man's soul through a fiddle-playing contest. The song begins as a disappointed Devil arrives in Georgia, apparently "way behind" on stealing souls, when he comes upon a young man named Johnny who is playing a fiddle, and quite well. Out of desperation, the Devil, who claims to ...
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The phrase "A short, sharp shock", from the Act 1 song "I am so proud" has entered the English language, appearing in titles of books and songs, such as in samples of Pink Floyd's "The Dark Side of the Moon", as well as political manifestos. "Let the punishment fit the crime" is another often-used phrase from the Mikado's Act II song and has ...
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