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"Method to Your Madness" Metal Church: 1971 "Military Madness" ... Songbook & Tabs a growing collection of chords, tabs, and lyrics of anti-war songs from Bob Dylan ...
Songs for Beginners is the debut solo studio album by English singer-songwriter Graham Nash.Released in May 1971, it was one of four high-profile albums (all charting within the top fifteen) released by each member of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young in the wake of their chart-topping Déjà Vu album of 1970, along with After the Gold Rush (Neil Young, September 1970), Stephen Stills (Stephen ...
"Military Madness" (1971) " Chicago " (often listed as " Chicago / We Can Change the World ") is the debut solo single by English singer-songwriter Graham Nash , released in 1971 from his debut solo album Songs for Beginners .
The Proms began in 1895; in 1901 Elgar's newly composed 'Pomp and Circumstance' March No. 1 was introduced as an orchestral piece (a year before the words were written), conducted by Henry Wood who later recollected "little did I think then that the lovely broad melody of the trio would one day develop into our second national anthem".
The lyrics were written by German romantic poet Ludwig Uhland in 1809. Its immediate inspiration was the deployment of Badener troops against the Tyrolean Rebellion . In 1825, the Lieder composer Friedrich Silcher set it to music, based on the tune of a Swiss folk song , in honor of those who fell during the more recent Wars of Liberation ...
The original 1945 version is triumphal in tune, with its brass fanfares and ecstatic chords extended upward with the aid of trumpets, as part of the V-E Day celebrations. That arrangement by A. Alexandrov is very much in the tradition of final choruses in 19th-century Italian grand opera, and shows how he originally envisaged this composition.
"All Quiet on the Western Front" is an anti-war song about World War I, [1] and named after the book of the same name.The song also ends in a big orchestral finale including a church organ chord sequence played by James Newton Howard on a synthesizer, which can be said to be reminiscent of his earlier album closers such as "The King Must Die" and "Burn Down the Mission", and a chorus sung by ...
Considered one of the band's more "serious" songs, "Walking on a Thin Line" was written by Andre Pessis and Kevin Wells (of Clover, then 5000 Volts). [1] [2] The Sacramento Bee thought the song was about a veteran's post-war stress. [3]