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Twilight is the second studio album by Filipino rock band Hale, released under EMI Philippines on September 30, 2006. It contains four singles, which are the widely nominated "Waltz", "Hide and Seek", "Shooting Star" and "The Ballad Of".
Hale is a Filipino alternative rock band, formed in Manila, Philippines in 2004. The group originally consisted of singer and guitarist Champ Lui Pio , bassist Sheldon Gellada , guitarist Roll Martinez and drummer Omnie Saroca.
The Band Played On", also known (by its refrain) as "Casey Would Waltz with a Strawberry Blonde", is a song that was written in 1895 with lyrics by John F. Palmer and music by Charles B. Ward. [1] Sheet music cover. Unusually, as originally published the verses are in 2 4 time, while the chorus is in 3 4 (waltz) time. The chorus is much better ...
Hale. Released: April 2005, 2 March 2006 (Re-Release) Label: EMI Philippines; 3× Platinum [1] 2006 Twilight. Released: 30 September 2006; Label: EMI Philippines; Gold [2] 2008 Above, Over and Beyond. Released: 28 April 2008; Label: EMI Philippines – 2009 Kundiman. Released: 27 July 2009; Label: PolyEast Records – 2018 Alon. Released: 14 ...
This is a list of artists who have reached number one on the UK Singles Chart as recorded by the Official Charts Company since November 1952. Artists are listed alphabetically. Solo artists are listed by surname and groups are listed by full names excluding "the" or any foreign translations of "the".
The song is the only track from the Cahoots album included on the original releases of Rock of Ages and The Last Waltz. The song was featured in the Bill Murray movie Larger Than Life. Billboard called it a "funky beat swinger with a potent lyric line." [1] Cash Box said that the "lyrics are of utmost importance."
"I Get Off" is the debut single by American hard rock band Halestorm, released on March 10, 2009, from their 2009 self-titled debut album. [1] The song was written by lead singer Lzzy Hale with its producer, Howard Benson, and Dana Calitri, Kathy Sommer, and Nina Ossoff. Lyrically, the song describes deriving pleasure from sexual exhibitionism.
It first reached the Billboard magazine charts on December 7, 1951 and lasted 1 week on the chart, at #26. [3] Lucienne Delyle recorded a version in 1952 with French lyrics. A 1952 arrangement of "Charmaine" by Billy May and His Orchestra reached # 17 on the Billboard charts. The single was May's biggest hit under his own name. [5]