Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"Pack of Cigarettes" (Russian: «Пачка сигарет») is a song by the Soviet post-punk band Kino from the album Zvezda po imeni Solntse released in 1988. One of Kino's most popular songs. It was written in 1988, when Viktor Tsoi was filmed in The Needle.
Angel is the first album by the rock band Angel. "Tower", the keyboard-heavy opening track, [3] was used widely during the late 1970s and early 1980s by album rock radio stations in the US for various advertising purposes. The track is also on K-SHE radio's Classic List. [4]
"Cigarettes" is a song by American rapper Juice Wrld. After being leaked for several years, it was released on February 2, 2022, by Grade A Productions and Interscope Records. The song was produced by Nick Mira. It was later added to Juice Wrld's fourth studio album Fighting Demons as a part of the extended edition.
Bollywood, the Hindi part of the Indian film industry, is the largest film producer in India, and one of the largest film production centres in the world. [1] Producing nearly 1000 films, selling 3.1 billion cinema tickets and grossing close to ten billion dollars a year, [2] Bollywood exerts an extreme stronghold on the Indian culture and influences daily approximately 15 million people who ...
According to research by Smokefree Media, an anti-smoking lobby group that tracks cigarette usage in films, cinema’s renewed love of lighting up reflects a marked change from previous years ...
Note that only songs should be included where smoking tobacco is the major theme. Pages in category "Songs about tobacco" The following 17 pages are in this category, out of 17 total.
"Smoking on My Ex Pack" is a song by American singer-songwriter SZA from her second studio album, SOS (2022). The second of the album's three rap tracks, it is a boom bap song with a chipmunk soul production style, fusing hard-hitting drum beats with a sped-up sample of Webster Lewis 's "Open Up Your Eyes" (1981).
(That Cigarette)" is a Western swing novelty song written by Merle Travis and Tex Williams, [3] for Williams and his talking blues style of singing. Travis wrote the bulk of the song. [ 4 ] The original Williams version went to number one for 16 non-consecutive weeks on the Hot Country Songs chart and became a #1 hit in August 1947 and remained ...