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D. D.O.A. (song) Daddy Never Was the Cadillac Kind; Dancing (Kylie Minogue song) Dead Embryonic Cells; Dead Skunk; Death (Melanie Martinez song) Death (Trippie Redd song)
"The Death of Jack the Ripper" – The Legendary Pink Dots "Down on Whores" – Benediction "Fall" - Eminem "In the Mind of a Lunatic" – Sigh "Jack" – Iced Earth [24] "Jack the Knife" – The Electric Hellfire Club "Jack the Ripper" – Buckethead "Jack the Ripper" - Hobbs' Angel of Death "Jack the Ripper" – LL Cool J "Jack The Ripper ...
Fate: The Best of Death is a compilation album by Death. It contains songs collected from their first four albums, Scream Bloody Gore (1987), Leprosy (1988), Spiritual Healing (1990) and Human (1991). Fate was a collection of songs from the first four Death albums controlled by Relativity Records, subsequently purchased by Sony Music ...
American Idiot was released on September 21, 2004 through Reprise Records; [8] "Wake Me Up When September Ends" is the eleventh song on the standard track list. [7] [9] It was released as the album's fourth single [10] on June 13, 2005, [11] [12] also through Reprise. [13]
The Cure released Songs of a Lost World, their first album of new material since 2008, on Friday. "I didn't want the album to be too much," Smith said. "I didn't want the album to be too much ...
The song chronicles the final voyage of the Edmund Fitzgerald as it succumbed to a massive late-season storm and sank in Lake Superior with the loss of all 29 crewmen. Lightfoot drew inspiration from news reports he gathered in the immediate aftermath, particularly "The Cruelest Month", published in Newsweek magazine's November 24, 1975, issue ...
Don't Break the Oath is the second studio album by Danish heavy metal band Mercyful Fate, released on 7 September 1984 through Roadrunner Records.. The style Mercyful Fate employed on Don't Break the Oath resembled a mixture of heavy metal with progressive elements, lyrically preoccupied with Satan and the occult and distinguished by King Diamond's theatrical falsetto vocals.
Rearranged as a pop song from its original form in the film, the track appears on British and European versions of Garfunkel's 1979 Fate for Breakfast and on the US versions of his 1981 album Scissors Cut. "Bright Eyes" topped the UK Singles Chart for six weeks and became Britain's biggest-selling single of 1979, selling over a million copies.