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Pentangle recorded "Let No Man Steal Your Thyme" on their 1968 debut The Pentangle. Shelagh McDonald recorded "Let No Man Steal Your Thyme" on Album (1970); the song was re-released on 2005's Let No Man Steal Your Thyme. Foster and Allen recorded A Bunch of Thyme as a single in 1979 and released an album of the same name in 1980.
1997, the second-wave ska band The Toasters' song "Don't Let The Bastards Grind You Down" appeared in the pilot episode of the animated series Mission Hill. [ 9 ] 2011, the chorus of Cheers (Drink to That) , a single on Rihanna 's album Loud repeats "Don't let the bastards get you down".
"Telluride" is a song recorded by Canadian country music artist Jade Eagleson. The song was written by Travis Wood, Blake Pendergrass, and John Pierce, and produced by Todd Clark. [1] The song was released to Canadian country radio in January 2024 as the third single off Eagleson's third studio album Do It Anyway. [2]
Jade is a 1995 American erotic thriller film written by Joe Eszterhas, produced by Robert Evans, directed by William Friedkin, and starring David Caruso, Linda Fiorentino, Chazz Palminteri, Richard Crenna, and Michael Biehn. The original music score was composed by James Horner based on a song composed by Loreena McKennitt. The film was ...
Suffer little children to come unto me or Let the Little Children Come to Me, is a painting attributed to the Dutch painter Rembrandt. The subject of the portrait is the teaching of Jesus about little children and it is estimated that Rembrandt painted it in Leiden in the 1620s.
Let the Good Times Roll" has also been identified as inspiring "Come On" by Earl King [8] and "Bon Ton Roulet" by Clifton Chenier. [ 9 ] In 1961 at the 3rd Annual Grammy Awards ceremony, Ray Charles won the Grammy for Best Rhythm & Blues Performance for his version of "Let the Good Times Roll" which was included on his 1959 album, The Genius of ...
Yaoji (Chinese: 瑶姬; lit. 'Princess Beautiful Jade'), [1] is a Chinese goddess of Wu Mountain. [2] A shaman and master herbalist, Yaoji is responsible for the presence of many medicinal herbs on Earth.
"Song for Athene", which has a performance time of about seven minutes, is an elegy consisting of the Hebrew word alleluia ("let us praise the Lord") sung monophonically six times as an introduction to texts excerpted and modified from the funeral service of the Eastern Orthodox Church and from Shakespeare's Hamlet (probably 1599–1601). [4]