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"The Trees" is a song by Canadian rock band Rush, from its 1978 album Hemispheres. The song is also featured on many of Rush's compilation albums. On the live album Exit...Stage Left, the song features an extended acoustic guitar introduction titled "Broon's Bane." Rolling Stone readers voted the song number 8 on the list of the 10 best Rush ...
The album was released through DreamWorks Records, Geffen Records' sister label, on September 9, 1997. [6] Prior to the release of the album, "Dream" was released as a single. [6] Kevin Godley directed the music video for the song. [6] In the music video, Stephenson was seen briefly in a still photograph. [6]
The Forest for the Trees, a 2003 German film directed by Maren Ade Forest for the Trees (film) , a 2021 Canadian documentary film Simultanagnosia , a condition where the affected individual could see individual details of a complex scene but failed to grasp the overall meaning of the image
Stephenson co-wrote and co-produced Beck's 1993 song "Loser". [5] The band's debut studio album, Forest for the Trees, was released on DreamWorks Records in 1997. [5] It peaked at number 190 on the Billboard 200 chart [6] and number 16 on the Heatseekers Albums chart. [7] Houston Press called it "one of the most impressive major-label debuts of ...
The "Tree mix" version of "A Forest" was released as a single on 6 December 1990, [25] a few weeks after the album release on 20 November. [26] The song was redone for the second time on the Join the Dots box set, this time remixed by Mark Plati and featuring Earl Slick on guitar.
"The Trees" is a song by British rock band Pulp, from their 2001 album We Love Life. Featuring a string sample from the Otley soundtrack song "Tell Her You Love Her," "The Trees" explores what Cocker describes as the "impassivity" of trees to witnessing the "drama" that can occur in the woods.
Related: Brenda Lee Reflects on Her Record-Breaking No. 1 Hit 'Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree' (Exclusive) "He said, 'I was laying on the beach in New York,' and pine trees were over to this side.'
The clip starts with a woman and man waking up, finding both of them a tin can phone, deciding to follow the cord through a forest. It also shows the band members playing their respective instruments around a tree. Finally, both meet and follow the cord up to the tree where the band members were playing, finding only a banjo leaning on the tree.