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"Me and Baby Brother" is a song written and performed by War. It reached #15 on the U.S. pop chart and #18 on the U.S. R&B chart in 1974. [2] It was featured on their 1973 album Deliver the Word. [3] A live version of the song entitled "Baby Brother" originally appeared on the 1971 album All Day Music.
Although credited to Emperor Haile Selassie I, whose Christian name is Tafari Makonen, the real author of the text remains uncertain [citation needed].It is sometimes believed that it was written by Lorenzo Tazaz, a close contributor who wrote many of the Ethiopian leader's most important speeches, including a historic one given in 1935 to the League of Nations.
The album featured two singles, "Gypsy Man" (severely truncated from the 11 minute album version) backed with "Deliver the Word" (US #8), and "Me and Baby Brother" backed with "In Your Eyes" (US #15).
Dutch-language protest song about the Vietnam War and Lyndon B. Johnson. "West of the Wall" written by Wayne Shanklin, recorded as a single by Toni Fisher (1962) "What are we making weapons for? (Let us begin)" John Denver and Alexander Gradsky: This song protests against government expenditure in weapons instead of in their citizens.
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Eurovision explained, from ABBA to Zorra, as the Israel-Hamas war overshadows the song contest. JILL LAWLESS. May 11, 2024 at 4:27 AM. ... They can perform in any genre and language, but the rules ...
The song “Freedom,” frequently used by Vice… Steven Cheung, spokesperson for the Trump campaign, posted a video on the social platform X of Trump walking off the plane after it landed in ...
Starr's version of the song was used as the basis for a cover version by Ugly Rumours, a group formed by Tony Blair while at university. The song was released by the Stop the War Coalition and credited to Ugly Rumours, with the band being fronted by a lookalike of Blair. It peaked at number 21 on the UK Singles Chart in March 2007.