Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In 2005, this band released an album titled Songs for Housework, and Croslin subsequently left the band. [4] [5] The Reivers reunited in 2008 for occasional performances around Austin. [6] On August 28, 2008, The Reivers played a benefit concert in Austin, and John Croslin announced that the re-formed band would be called Right or Happy. [7]
Pop Beloved is the fourth album released by The Reivers, in 1991.After two albums on major label Capitol Records that were critically well-reviewed but commercially underperforming, they returned to the independent DB Records.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
Saturday is a 1987 album by The Reivers.It was their major label debut on Capitol Records.Notable tracks include “In Your Eyes,” which is the only song for which the band produced an official video (directed by Kevin Kerslake); [2] and "Wait for Time," which Rolling Stone's Michael Azerrad described as "an amazing moment on an amazing album."
End of the Day is a 1989 album by the Reivers.It was their second (and last) album for Capitol Records.Many of the songs on the album deal with themes of home and family, including "Star Telegram", which writer Sarah Vowell called "one of the prettiest evocations of the lovely, lazy side of the American dream, a family unwinding in a Fort Worth back yard"; [2] and "Almost Home," which was ...
Translate Slowly is the 1985 debut album by The Reivers. This album was originally released under the band's original name, Zeitgeist, but was remixed in 1988 and re-released under the band name The Reivers, after another band claimed rights to the name "Zeitgeist." The album received positive attention from many critics.
That year, Today had a circulation of 300,000, with more than half of its readers being professionals, managers, executives and businesspeople. [8] It was the second-most-read English-language newspaper in Singapore, after The Straits Times. [9] In April 2017, Today discontinued its weekend
The Singapore Tiger Standard, an English morning daily newspaper, was accused as "anti-Merdeka" by S. Rajaratnam, [7] and was closed in 1959 after the People's Action Party came to power. [ 8 ] In 1971, the Government crackdown on newspapers perceived to be under foreign influence or with subversive tendencies; saw the closing of The Eastern ...