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"Let Him Run Wild" is a song by the American rock band the Beach Boys from their 1965 album Summer Days (And Summer Nights!!). Written by Brian Wilson and Mike Love , it was issued as the B-side to " California Girls ."
Featuring all five Temptations - Dennis Edwards, Eddie Kendricks, Paul Williams, Melvin Franklin, and Otis Williams - trading verses and harmony lines, "Runaway Child, Running Wild" paints a tale of a young boy (presumably a preteen) who runs away from home after being punished for playing hooky i.e. absence from school without permission. The ...
Run Wild may refer to: Run Wild (Lydia album) "Run Wild" (Barbra Streisand song) "Run Wild" (Big Time Rush song) "Run Wild" (New Order song) "Run Wild", the second single off Noel Hogan's album Mono Band
Run Wild. Live Free. Love Strong. is the second album from for King & Country. Fervent Records alongside Word Records released the project on September 16, 2014. For King & Country worked with producers Ben Glover, Matt Hales, Seth Mosley, and Tedd Tjornhom in the creation of this album. 5 tracks from the album became radio singles including "Fix My Eyes", "Shoulders", "It's Not Over Yet ...
The reunited band also recorded eight new songs in three days, releasing them on February 21, 2012, as an EP titled Silver Star. [7] [8] The Del Fuegos did reunite for a one night event in East Bridgewater, Massachusetts, in July 2023. [9] Then on December 21, 2024 they reunited again for two sold out shows at the Boston City Winery.
"Running Wild" is a song by South Korean singer Jin of BTS for his debut studio album Happy. It was released as the album's lead single on November 15, 2024, through Big Hit Music . [ 1 ] [ 2 ]
The song is performed during a rehearsal on a train journey, with Marilyn Monroe providing the vocals. [ 18 ] It was also used as introductory music on two early sound short films starring Laurel and Hardy ( Men O' War and They Go Boom , both 1929) before their celebrated theme tune The Ku-Ku Song was composed.
Reed and three of the people he has said he described in his lyrics: Holly Woodlawn, Jackie Curtis and Joe Dallesandro In the 2001 documentary Classic Albums: Lou Reed: Transformer, Reed says that it was Nelson Algren's 1956 novel, A Walk on the Wild Side (itself titled after the 1952 song "The Wild Side of Life"), [13] that was the launching point for the song, even though, as it grew, the ...