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The song's lyrics draw inspiration from John Rechy's transgressive novel City of Night, published in 1963, [11] [12] while its title is expressed as a metaphor, personifying L.A. (Los Angeles) as a woman. [4] In author Melissa Ursula Dawn Goldsmith's description, it is also used to describe the city's topography and atmosphere. [13]
"Los Angeles Mood (Chromium Descensions)" by Tom Waits "Los Angeles November 2019" by Vangelis (Blade Runner) "Los Angeles Poem" by Living Legends "Los Angeles River" by Russell Garcia & His Orchestra "Los Angeles Serenade" by Livingston Taylor "Los Angeles: The Song" by Justin Chart "Los Angeles Street Cleaner" by Paul Smith & Peter Brewis
The official music video for the single was uploaded to VEVO May 5, 2015. [3] It was directed by Warren Fu.In the video, a group of African Americans in 1940s Los Angeles, in a movie theater to see the (fictional) film California Roll: A Flight to the Future, find that the film is more like a ride, with seat belts required, and narrated by a talking robot.
The real lyrics, of course, are: “I can see clearly now, the rain is gone.” And, it was certainly a bright sunshine-y day for Nash when the single topped the charts , (although it would be his ...
Per the terms of Clarkson and Blackstock’s divorce settlement, the “Since U Been Gone” songstress agreed to pay her ex-husband a one-time amount of $1.3 million in addition to $46,500 per ...
Kesha Amy Sussman/Getty Images for Coachella Kesha made a surprise appearance at Coachella and sent a pointed message to Sean “Diddy” Combs. Singer Renée Rapp played at the music festival on ...
"Pico and Sepulveda" is a 1947 song by Freddy Martin and his orchestra. Composed by Eddie Maxwell (Eddie Cherkose) and Jule Styne (Ambassador Records, 1947 — b/w "She of the Coffee Brown Eyes"), it features a Latin-style beat, and Martin used the alias "Felix Figueroa" when performing and recording the song.
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