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"Him & I" is a song recorded by American rapper G-Eazy and American singer Halsey. The song was released via RCA Records on November 30, 2017, as the second single from the former's third studio album The Beautiful & Damned. It was written alongside Edgar Machuca, Jim Lavigne, Dakarai Gwitira, Madison Love, and production duo The Futuristics.
"I and I" is a song by Bob Dylan that appears as the seventh track (or song number three on Side 2 of the LP) of his 1983 album Infidels. [2] Recorded on April 27, 1983, [3] it was released as a single in Europe in November of that year, featuring a version of Willie Nelson's "Angel Flying Too Close to the Ground" as its B-side. [4]
Subsequently, another iteration of the new version was released, this time with the combined English and German lyrics, performed along with English singer Kim Wilde. [29] The video was filmed outside the London Guildhall and in and around Change Alley, London EC3.
English translation And because a person is a person, he'll need something to eat, please! He gets tired of prattle for it does not give him food. — Refrain: — So left, two, three! — So left, two, three! — To where your place is, comrade! — Join up with the workers' United Front, — for you are a worker too! And because a person is a ...
[19] [25] HIM would go on to win "Newcomer of the Year" and "Debut Album of the Year" at the Finnish Emma Awards in 1998. [26] Greatest Lovesongs Vol. 666 was released internationally a year after its initial Finnish release, charting at number 56 in Germany. [27] [28] The album would re-enter the German Albums Chart in 2000, peaking at number ...
Ra-Ta-Ta", or "Ra Ta-Ta-Ta" is a 1970 German song written by Hamburg pianist Chris Juwens (real name Uwe Stelzmann; 1946-1998) and Christian Heilburg (real name Gregor Rottschalk, 01/12/1945). Gunter Gabriel of CBS Records Germany heard the song's catchy potential right away, but his boss dissuaded him. [ 1 ]
Emilio de Torre added Spanish lyrics, and English lyrics were added in 1940 by Al Stillman. The best-known version of the song is that by Jimmy Dorsey in 1940 . The Jimmy Dorsey recording, with a vocal by Bob Eberly , [ 2 ] was released by Decca Records as catalogue number 3150.
The hymn was revived in 1929 with completely new lyrics, known as "Sei gesegnet ohne Ende", which remained the national anthem of Austria until the Anschluss. The first stanza of the hymn's 1854 version was sung in 1989 during the funeral of Empress Zita of Austria [ 14 ] and again in 2011 during the funeral of her son Otto von Habsburg.