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Westron Wynde was put to music by Igor Stravinsky as a movement (Westron Wind) of his Cantata (1952). [citation needed] The American folk group The Limeliters (Louis Gottlieb, Alex Hassilev, and Glenn Yarbrough) recorded a version using a variation of the first tune above, with modern English stanzas interpolated. Both the variation and the ...
So wait for the wagon, and we'll all take a ride. (Chorus) So wait for the wagon, Oh! wait for the wagon, Oh! wait for the wagon and we'll all take a ride. Oh! wait for the wagon and we'll all take a ride. (First verse) Will you come with me my Phillis dear, to yon blue mountain free, Where the blossoms smell the sweetest, come rove along with me.
"Weren't for the Wind" is a song by American country music singer Ella Langley. It was released in January 2025, as the first single from the deluxe reissue of her debut studio album, Hungover. [1] Langley co-wrote the song with Johnny Clawson and Joybeth Taylor, and it was produced by Will Bundy.
They live in Sonoma County, California, [126] and have three children: Kellesimone Wylder Waits (born 1983), [163] Casey Waits (born 1985), [177] and Sullivan Blake Waits (born 1993). [341] [342] After he married and had children, Waits became increasingly reclusive. [343] Safeguarding the privacy of his family life became very important to him ...
Some tunes are extant named after the waits of particular towns and cities, e.g. Chester Waits and London Waits. The instruments used by waits varied. The usual instrument was the shawm , a loud and piercing wind instrument suited to outdoor playing.
The poet becomes the wind's instrument, his "lyre" (57). This is a symbol of the poet's own passivity towards the wind; he becomes his musician and the wind's breath becomes his breath. The poet's attitude—towards the wind has changed: in the first canto the wind has been an "enchanter" (3), now the wind has become an "incantation" (65).
Songs written by Tom Waits "Heartattack and Vine" - 4:44 from Heartattack and Vine (1980) Tom Waits - vocals, electric guitar; Larry Taylor - bass; John Thomassie - drums; Plas Johnson - tenor and baritone saxes "Eggs and Sausage (In a Cadillac With Susan Michelson)" - 4:23 from Nighthawks at the Diner (1975) Tom Waits - vocals, piano
"Tom Traubert's Blues (Four Sheets to the Wind in Copenhagen)" (commonly known as "Tom Traubert's Blues" or "Waltzing Matilda") is a song by American musician Tom Waits. It is the opening track on Waits' fourth studio album Small Change , released in September 1976 on Asylum Records .