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"Time Stand Still" was the first track Neil Peart wrote for Hold Your Fire. [2] According to Peart, he wrote the lyrics for "Time Stand Still" based on his time with Rush : "All through the '70s our lives were flying by; we spent so much time on the road that it became like a dark tunnel.
Time Stands Still (disambiguation) "When Time Stood Still", a song from the 1981 album Time (Electric Light Orchestra album) Where Time Stood Still, an isometric 3D arcade adventure game released by Ocean in 1988
[citation needed] Three additional songs written in the album's context were recorded, but left off the release: "The Bouncer", "When Time Stood Still" and "Julie Don’t Live Here". These songs were originally going to be on a double album of Time, [10] but they were instead issued as B-sides of later singles after Time was reduced to a single ...
"Time Stands Still, an English lute song by John Dowland, from The Third and Last Booke of Songs or Aires (1603), no. 2 "Time Stands Still", a song by Meredith MacRae, 1964 "Time Stands Still", a song by Gary Lewis & the Playboys, 1965; Time Stands Still (The All-American Rejects song), a 2003 song by the power pop band The All-American Rejects ...
The lyrics are in classical Urdu, written by the Pakistani Urdu-language poet Hafeez Jalandhari in 1952. No verse in the three stanzas is repeated. [ 2 ] The lyrics have heavy Persian poetic vocabulary, [ 17 ] and the only words derived from Sanskrit are "ka" ( کا [kaˑ] 'of'), and "tu" ( تو [tuˑ] 'thou').
Over 20 collections of verse and over 2,500 film songs for Pakistani and Indian films were published. He wrote songs for 201 Pakistani and Indian films. His talent crossed the borders. His poetry has been translated into numerous languages including Hindi, Gujarati, English, Russian and Chinese. On Qateel Shifai's 11th death anniversary in 2012 ...
Hafeez Jalandhari was unique in Urdu poetry for the enchanting melody of his voice and lilting rhythms of his songs and lyrics. His poetry generally dealt with romantic, religious, patriotic and natural themes. His language was a fine blend of Hindi and Urdu diction, reflecting the composite culture of South Asia. [3]
Entertainment Weekly wrote that "taken together, the album — with its unceasing references to rain and rivers — inevitably bogs down, but heard one at a time over the FM in the Ford, even its platitudes, given [John] Waite’s delivery, add up to a hack-rock miracle or two."