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"Goodbye Blue Sky" is a song by the English rock band Pink Floyd. [1] It appears on their 1979 double album, The Wall. [2] Plot. In a brief prologue, a skylark is ...
"Blue Sky" is a song by the American rock band The Allman Brothers Band from their third studio album, Eat a Peach (1972), released on Capricorn Records. The song was written and sung by guitarist Dickey Betts , who penned it about his girlfriend (and later wife), Sandy "Bluesky" Wabegijig.
Originally, "Empty Spaces" was intended to be much later on The Wall. Until very late in production, "Empty Spaces" was in the key of D minor, and sequenced between "Don't Leave Me Now" and "Another Brick in the Wall, Part 3", while "Goodbye Blue Sky" was followed by a similar, longer song called "What Shall We Do Now?".
"Goodbye Mr A" is the second single by the English [2] [3] [4] pop rock band the Hoosiers, from their debut album, The Trick to Life (2007). The song is written in the key of B major and was created in memory of frontman Irwin Sparkes' secondary school English teacher, Jonathan "Mr A" Anderton, after Sparkes heard of Anderton's death in 2006.
Goodbye Blue Sky is the seventh and final studio album by Godley & Creme released in 1988.. The album generated two singles, "A Little Piece of Heaven" (a top 30 hit in several countries across Europe) and "10,000 Angels", which featured a number of non-album b-sides.
A two year old Harry Waters is heard in the original recording of "Goodbye Blue Sky" on Pink Floyd's 1979 album The Wall. [3] The song opens with him saying "Look, mummy, there's an aeroplane up in the sky". Harry and India Waters are credited as "children in the garden" in the liner notes of Roger Waters' 1987 solo album Radio KAOS [4]
The song is approximately one minute, 46 seconds in length, beginning with 24 seconds of a helicopter sound effect, followed by the schoolmaster shouting, "You! Yes, you! Stand still, laddie!" performed by Roger Waters. Waters's lead vocal is treated with a reverse echo. The song features an electric guitar with an added delay effect and an ...
The shrill siren-like sound effect used during this song is also used in an earlier Pink Floyd work, "Echoes". The noise is mimicking a seagull cry. The seagull noise was created by David Gilmour using a wah-wah pedal with the guitar and output leads plugged in the wrong way round. The second half of the song is an instrumental classical guitar ...