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Rainbow Stew Live at Anaheim Stadium is a live album by American country music artist Merle Haggard with backing by The Strangers. It was recorded in October 1980 and released in July 1981 on MCA Records .
"Rainbow Stew" is a song written and recorded live by American country music artist Merle Haggard backed by The Strangers. It was released in June 1981 as the lead single from the live album Rainbow Stew Live at Anaheim Stadium. The song reached #4 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart. [2]
Dhanak (Hindi pronunciation: [d̪ʰənək]; transl. Rainbow) is a 2015 Indian Hindi-language children's road film written and directed by Nagesh Kukunoor. [2] Produced by Manish Mundra, Nagesh Kukunoor, and Elahe Hiptoola, the film features Hetal Gada and Krrish Chhabria as the two children, playing brother and sister, in the leading roles, with supporting performances from Chet Dixon, Vipin ...
Same Train, A Different Time (subtitled Merle Haggard Sings the Great Songs of Jimmie Rodgers) is the ninth studio album by American country music artist Merle Haggard backed by The Strangers, released in 1969, featuring covers of songs by legendary country music songwriter Jimmie Rodgers. It was originally released as a 2 LP set on Capitol ...
Country Joe McDonald 2006. Time Flies By is a double album by Country Joe McDonald.The 25 songs are covering 45 years of his songwriter activity. The singer and guitarist is accompanied by the Woodstock drummer Greg Dewey of Country Joe and the Fish, the bassist Tim Eschliman and several guest musicians.
Hindi: Ābhēri / Bhimpalasi: Ye Na Thi Hamri Kismat Mirza Ghalib (film) Ghulam Mohammed: Suraiya: Hindi: Ābhēri/ Bhimpalasi: Khilte Hain Gul Yahan [TH - A Raga's Journey 1] Sharmeelee: Sachin Dev Burman: Kishore Kumar & Lata Mangeshkar: Hindi: Ābhēri/ Bhimpalasi: Khoya Khoya Chand [TH - A Raga's Journey 1] Kala Bazar: Mohammed Rafi: Hindi ...
The non-album B-side, "Weiss Heim" is an instrumental song, recorded in January 1980 at Sweet Silence Studios in Copenhagen. The name, meaning 'white home' in German (although grammatically wrong as the adjective lacks declension - correct would be "Weisses Heim"), comes from a moniker Blackmore had given his house he was living in at the time. [7]
The song was written by Nawab Wajid Ali Shah, the 19th-century Nawab of Awadh, as a lament when he was exiled from his beloved Lucknow by the British Raj before the failed Rebellion of 1857. He uses the bidaai (bride's farewell) of a bride from her father's ( babul ) home as a metaphor for his own banishment from his beloved Lucknow to far away ...