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The French composer Marin Marais composed the tune as a dance for his opera Alcyone of 1706, with the title Marche pour les Matelots. [1] [2]The tune was subsequently included in Raoul Auger Feuillet's 1706 Recueil de contredanse along with a longways proper dance, La Matelotte, which Feuillet had himself written to go with the tune.
Two of the album's tracks, "San Angelo" and "The Master's Call", were re-recordings of songs originally appearing on Robbins' earlier Gunfighter Ballads albums. AllMusic gave the album a rating of four-and-a-half stars. [4]
"Somewhere a Voice Is Calling" is a World War I song originally released in 1911. Arthur F. Tate composed the song and Eileen Newton wrote the lyrics. The song was published by T. B. Harms & Francis, Day & Hunter, Inc. in New York City. [3] The song was recorded on October 29, 1913, by vocalist Henry Burr in Camden, New Jersey.
Melodic Magazine reviewed the song saying "Liquid-like riffs, powerhouse vocals and billowing percussion make 'Meeting the Master' a proper introduction to Starcatcher and its existential themes." [6] "'Meeting the Master' peers into an esoteric world heeded by the word of a wise teacher," the band explained in a statement. "Sung in the voice ...
"The Calling" was a number-three Mainstream Rock hit for the band in 1994, their last (as of 2024) top-ten hit on that chart. Yes had two subsequent Mainstream Rock hits: 1994's "Walls" (also from Talk) and 1997's "Open Your Eyes" from the album of the same name. [4] "The Calling" has appeared on several Yes compilations.
"Come and Get Your Love" is a song by the American rock band Redbone. [4] The song was originally released as a promo track under the name "Hail" and was later featured on their fifth album, Wovoka (1973), under its current name. The song was released as the album's first single the following year.
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[3] The song was recorded on Columbia records by Arthur Fields and Peerless Quartette [4] and on Victor by William J. ("Sailor") Reilly. [5] The song was part of a genre of "Kaiser-hanging songs," which numbered more than a hundred in 1917 and 1918. [6] The title page featured an illustration of the Kaiser recoiling as US troops entered Berlin. [6]