Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Song to the Siren" is a song written by Tim Buckley and Larry Beckett, [2] first released by Buckley on his 1970 album Starsailor. It was later included on Morning Glory: The Tim Buckley Anthology , featuring a performance of the song from the final episode of The Monkees .
"Song to the Siren" was released on their own record label, called "Diamond Records" (after Ed's nickname). In October 1992, they pressed 500 white label copies and took them to various dance record shops around London, but none would play it, saying that it was too slow (the track played at 111 BPM).
A siren song typically refers to the song of the siren, dangerous creatures in Greek mythology who lured sailors with their music and voices to shipwreck.
"Sirens" Lee Brice: 2014: From the album I Don't Dance. The subject picks up a female hitchhiker who robbed a bank and grabs the steering wheel and causes a crash rather than surrendering to the cops. "Sleep Patterns" Merchant Ships: 2010: The fourth song from the album For Cameron is a spoken poem with backing guitar. It tells the story of the ...
"The Siren" is the fourth and last single of Finnish symphonic metal band Nightwish's fifth studio album Once. The song was recorded with the London Session Orchestra and includes many exotic instruments, for example an electric violin and a sitar; [1] it also has very few lines. [2] Vocals are by Tarja Turunen and Marko Hietala.
The above-mentioned video is what has been typically shown as a music video, on music channels, and is a shortened version of the song Siren. The DVD included in the limited release CD+DVD set has a full length version of the song, with animated scenes from the TV series put together as a music video. (SECL 636)
The album contained original compositions as well as covers of songs by Ernest Tubb, Loretta Lynn and the 1974 Queen song "Misfire". [24] When the album was released, critics compared Case to honky-tonk singers like Lynn and Patsy Cline , and to rockabilly pioneer Wanda Jackson , particularly in her vocal timbre.
"Milk" is a song written and produced by American alternative rock band Garbage from their self-titled debut studio album (1995). The song was released internationally the following year as the album's fifth and final single. Garbage collaborated with trip hop musician Tricky on a new version of "Milk" for single release. Much media comment was ...