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"Homeboy" is a song co-written and recorded by American country music artist Eric Church. It was released in February 2011 as the ninth single of his career and the first from his 2011 album Chief . The song reached the Top 20 on the U.S. Billboard Hot Country Songs chart with a peak at number 13.
Later that year, the song was released as a 12-inch single on April 21 as part of Record Store Day 2012. A remixed version of the song appears as the A-side, with a remixed version of another track from The Suburbs, "Ready to Start", as the B-side. Both remixes were done by Canadian music producer Damian Taylor. [7] [8]
The music video was directed by Hayley Young and released on 22 July 2015. [3] The video features Joy staring down the barrel of the camera while some dramatic scenes unfold in the background. [4] The song was used by the Country Fire Authority in 2020 for a short video 'Skilled and Ready' celebrating the volunteer fire and emergency response ...
"Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels)" is a song by Canadian rock band Arcade Fire, and the first track on their debut album Funeral. It is the first of the four-part "Neighborhood" series found on Funeral . It was the band's first single, released several months before the album as a 7" vinyl record on June 20, 2004, to a pressing of 1500 copies.
The video is a shortened version of the short film Scenes from the Suburbs, directed by Spike Jonze and inspired by the album itself. In February 2011, music video blog Yes, We've Got a Video! ranked the song's music video at number 7 in their top 30 videos of 2010.
The group is best known for Barrett and Brown's "Good Good Father," which attained massive popularity after Chris Tomlin recorded the song and released it as a single. [4] Their album, Housefires III , charted on three Billboard magazine charts, The Billboard 200 at No. 106, [ 5 ] Christian Albums at No. 3, [ 6 ] and Independent Albums at No. 6 ...
It features the duo and a full band performing the song from within a ring of fire in the Mojave Desert, and scenes of a man and woman walking towards each other from afar, eventually meeting at night and caressing around the ring of fire. Their images "melt away" in the fire as the video goes on. [5]
No sane music artist would deny Nile being a part of their project." Moran noted that "Nile is a true inspiration to the world in his ability to create and shape musical genres. It was a thrill to work with him in the booth." [2] Rodgers later told Billboard “It felt like a song I’d love to play on. I laughed and said, ‘Plug me in!’”