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"I'm Shipping Up to Boston" is a song by the Celtic punk band Dropkick Murphys, with lyrics written by folk singer Woody Guthrie. The original version of the song was released in 2004 on Give 'Em the Boot IV and was re-recorded for their certified gold selling 2005 album, The Warrior's Code .
"Going to Boston" (also "Goodbye Girls, I'm Going to Boston"), traditional folksong [1] "Going Out in Style" by the Dropkick Murphys "Government Center" by Jonathan Richman (The Modern Lovers) "Homecoming King" by Guster "I Hate Boston" by Reneé Rapp "I Want My City Back" by The Mighty Mighty Bosstones "The Ice of Boston" by The Dismemberment Plan
"Boston" is a song by American rock band Augustana, from their debut album All the Stars and Boulevards (2005). The song was released as the second single on January 17, 2006. [ 2 ] It was originally produced in 2003 by Jon King for their demo, Midwest Skies and Sleepless Mondays, and was later re-recorded with producer Brendan O'Brien for All ...
The song was written in the Regis Hotel, New York City during a tour of the United States. The song was intended as an antithesis to flower power anthems of the time such as "Let's Go to San Francisco" and "San Francisco (Be Sure to Wear Flowers in Your Hair)" in that the protagonist had been to San Francisco to join the hippies but was now homesick.
‘Going back there I’m sure will bring a smile to my face when I step into that rink,’ Matthew Tkachuk said. Panthers’ return to Boston brings back memories of playoff run’s magical start ...
The song has been covered numerous times, most notably by country music singer David Allan Coe and folk singer Joan Baez, who actually began her career in the Boston-Cambridge area and included "Please Come to Boston" on her 1976 live album, From Every Stage. As other female singers performing "Please Come to Boston" have done, Baez sings from ...
The song also makes a reference to the Wolverine rail service, which stopped at Rhinecliff, New York, near to Bard College, the alma mater of Donald Fagen and Walter Becker. The incident happened while both Fagen and Becker were students there, and the song recounts how a female acquaintance betrayed them to "Daddy Gee" ( G. Gordon Liddy ...
"Houston" was a hit in 1965 when recorded by Dean Martin.Dean Martin's daughter, Deana Martin, has recounted her father telling her that the percussive sound was created by tapping an empty Coca-Cola bottle with a spoon, [3] while Hal Blaine once stated that he created the sound by tapping a glass ash tray with a triangle wand.