Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
According to Tom Schnabel of KCRW, [3] he was told that Nina Simone's "See-line Woman" was a 19th-century seaport song about sailors coming into port (such as Charleston or New Orleans) and prostitutes waiting for them, lined up along the dock, hence the term 'sea line' (a line of women by the sea) or alternatively, "see-line" (women standing ...
The music video for "Broken Clocks" was co-directed by SZA and Dave Free, and was released on March 30, 2018. [4] The video features SZA at a summer camp in the wilderness. As the song comes to a close, the camera cuts to SZA as a stripper, lying unconscious on the bathroom floor of a strip club, following an altercation with another woman. [5]
A vinyl reissue of Broken, along with its flyer, pictured in 2018. Broken was originally packaged in a trifold-out digipak, containing the six tracks on a regular compact disc and an additional three-inch mini CD with the two remaining songs, covers of Adam and the Ants' "Physical" and Pigface's "Suck".
"Broken" was the band's breakout hit, reaching number 29 on the Billboard Hot 100 and spending nine weeks at number one on Billboard ' s Alternative Songs chart. The song held the record for longest running entry on the latter chart, at 76 weeks, eclipsing the 65 week run of " Savior " by Rise Against , until it was passed by the chart run of ...
Bryant shared the video on YouTube. The 3-minute-long video shows a sea lion thrashing about with an octopus. The sea lion flings the octopus forcefully away, then dives underwater and repeats the ...
"Broken" is a song by Italian singer Elisa, released on October 24, 2003 as the lead single from her fourth studio album Lotus. The song was also includes in the greatest hits album Soundtrack '96–'06 .
Liverpool was a natural point of embarkation for such a song because it had the necessary shipping lines and a choice of destinations and infrastructure, including special emigration trains directly to The Prince's Landing Stage (which is mentioned in the song's first line). Whether intending to go as a professional sailor (as in Maitland's ...
The song was released as the second single from the band's sixth studio album Ember in April 2018. The song's music video continues the storyline portrayed in the video for "Red Cold River", the band's prior video, and is the second part of a trilogy of planned videos. [1]