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Thirteen Ghosts (also known as 13 Ghosts and stylized as THIR13EN Ghosts) is a 2001 supernatural horror film directed by Steve Beck in his directorial debut. A remake of the 1960 film 13 Ghosts by William Castle, [2] the film stars Tony Shalhoub, Embeth Davidtz, Matthew Lillard, Shannon Elizabeth, Alec Roberts, Rah Digga, and F. Murray Abraham.
13 Ghosts is a 1960 American supernatural horror film produced and directed by William Castle, written by Robb White and starring Rosemary DeCamp, Margaret Hamilton, Charles Herbert, Martin Milner, Jo Morrow, John van Dreelen, and Donald Woods. [3]
Their music videos received airplay on more than 50 video shows [15] on the top cable channels in the 1980s. MTV's "120 Minutes" aired the music videos for the songs "Suddenly Sunday" and "Thirteen Ghosts." SuperStation WTBS also aired the music video "Suddenly Sunday" on their show "Night Tracks". [citation needed]
Nine Inch Nails performing in June 2022; from left to right: Ilan Rubin, Trent Reznor, Alessandro Cortini, Atticus Ross, and Robin Finck. This is a list of every song ever released by American industrial rock band Nine Inch Nails.
The song reached numbers six and 24 on Billboard ' s Hot Modern Rock Tracks and Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks charts, respectively. [15] [16] Another song, "Echoplex", was released as a free download from iLike later. [17] The ID3 tags of these MP3 files also pointed to the date May 5, just as Reznor's post had. [17]
Seven Inches of Satanic Panic is the third EP by the Swedish rock band Ghost.First released digitally on 13 September 2019 by Loma Vista Recordings, it features the songs "Kiss the Go-Goat" and "Mary on a Cross", written by vocalist Tobias Forge along with songwriters Salem al Fakir and Vincent Pontare.
The resulting album Don't Stop Singing yielded the song "London", co-written by Stonier, which was adopted by BBC TV for usage during their coverage of the 2012 Summer Olympics. On 2015's Ghosts And Graffiti collection, Stonier worked with artists including Billy Bragg, The Waterboys and Joan Baez on new versions of
SingersRoom critic Simon Robinson rated it Big Star's best song, praising the "catchy melody and jangly guitars that perfectly capture the carefree and optimistic spirit of youth" and the "simple yet poignant" lyrics that evoke the "experience of teenage romance and heartbreak." [7] The song was originally featured on the 1972 album #1 Record.