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The New Lost City Ramblers on their 1959 album Songs from the Depression.; Ry Cooder on his 1970 self-titled album Ry Cooder.This version reorders the verses compared with Reed's original and is a very different arrangement; however, all of the lyrics come from the original version recorded by Reed.
"Overcome" is a song by American alternative rock group Live that was released as the second single from their 2001 album, V. In the United States, the September 11 attacks were a catalyst for the song's addition to radio despite not receiving an official release there.
The single's B-side track is a live performance of "Cities" from the August 24, 1979 concert at the Berklee Performance Center. [8] An 8:24 extended live version appears on the 2004 reissue of The Name of This Band Is Talking Heads. [9] The song was included as the first track on Röyksopp's mix album Back to Mine (2007). [10]
Described as The Beatles’ final song, “Now and Then” has finally been released, featuring the voice of the late John Lennon decades after he first wrote it. The Beatles’ ‘last’ song ...
The Beatles‘ “Now and Then” debuted around the world this morning (Nov. 2), bringing to life a rough John Lennon voice-and-piano home demo from the late 1970s thanks to the same machine ...
The twelve track vinyl album featured four songs sung by Fulton (including the aforementioned version of "Where Were You When I Needed You"), six songs sung by Sloan, one song sung by Barri ("You Didn't Have To Be So Nice"), and one as a duet between Sloan and Barri ("I Am a Rock"). It failed to chart. [4]
The music video was directed by Thom Oliphant and premiered in mid-2000. It features Messina performing the song from various colored rooms, both solo and joined by backup dancers. Messina and others are also shown throughout the video climbing the walls and ceiling of the rooms, appearing to defy gravity.
The older I get, the more I love that fiddle and pedal (steel) sound, that pure country sound." In the same interview, Walker also said "If I Could Make a Living is really a fun-lovin' song, but it's a short song . . . a really short song, only two minutes and 14 seconds. Every night I do that song in concert I think, 'Man, that's not enough.'" [1]