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Tomorrow is the only studio album by the English psychedelic rock band Tomorrow. It was originally released in 1968 by EMI Parlophone in the U.K. in a black and white sleeve. A slightly different version of the album was also released in the U.S. in 1968 by Sire Records, one of the first releases on that label. Although it was not a success ...
There was a long delay between their 1967 single releases and the eventual release of their self-titled album in February 1968, and the album would fail commercially. Tomorrow singer Keith West became better known as a participant in Mark Wirtz's A Teenage Opera project that gave him the solo hit single "Excerpt from 'A Teenage Opera' (Grocer ...
Tomorrow is the second album by Jamaican-American singer Sean Kingston. The album was released on September 7, 2009. [ 1 ] Led by the single " Fire Burning ", the album peaked at number 37 on the U.S. Billboard 200 albums chart with 13,000 copies sold in the first week of release.
"Tomorrow Is a Long Time" is a song written and recorded by Bob Dylan. Dylan's version first appeared on the album Bob Dylan's Greatest Hits Vol. II compilation, released in 1971. It was subsequently included in the triple LP compilation Masterpieces .
Tomorrow is the second album by American rock band SR-71, featuring the Top 30 hit "Tomorrow". It was the first SR-71 album with John Allen on drums, since Dan Garvin left after Now You See Inside. "My World" would later be re-recorded by Bo Bice for his debut album The Real Thing, in which frontman Mitch Allan played guitar and
Tomorrow, a 2017 South Korean manhwa series; Tomorrow, a novel by Graham Swift; Tomorrow series, a series of novels by John Marsden; Tom Tomorrow, the pen name of American editorial cartoonist Dan Perkins
According to Tomorrow drummer John 'Twink' Alder, the song was inspired by the Dutch Provos, an anarchist group in Amsterdam which instituted a bicycle-sharing system: "They had white bicycles in Amsterdam and they used to leave them around the town. And if you were going somewhere and you needed to use a bike, you'd just take the bike and you ...
"Tomorrow Never Knows" is a song by the English rock band the Beatles, written primarily by John Lennon and credited to Lennon–McCartney. [10] It was released in August 1966 as the final track on their album Revolver, although it was the first song recorded for the LP.