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"Lasso the Moon" is a song written by Steve Dorff and Milton Brown, and recorded by American country music artist Gary Morris. The song was released in May 1985 and was featured on the soundtrack to the comedy-western film Rustlers' Rhapsody. The song reached number 9 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart. [1]
List of the busiest airports in California In Calendar year 2022 (FAA data) by 'passenger boardings, not total passengers, except for Tijuana. While large airports dominant traffic and small airports struggle to retain carriers or completely lose scheduled passenger service, there are but a few growing medium-sized airports.
"Padre Don José" is a French-language song written by Jacques Larue and Alain Romans, originally released in 1956 by Gloria Lasso. [1] In 1957, Paul Francis Webster wrote English lyrics for the song, titled "Padre". The following year, it was released as a single by Toni Arden.
In its 2019 airport rankings, The Wall Street Journal ranked Sky Harbor as the best airport overall among the 20 largest airports in the U.S. [115] "Phoenix excelled in several of the 15 categories, with short screening waits, fast Wi-Fi, good Yelp scores for restaurant reviews, short taxi-to-takeoff times for planes and cheap average Uber cost ...
Don Henley resumed testifying Tuesday in a trial over handwritten drafts of lyrics to some of the Eagles' biggest hits, including “Hotel California," and his decade-long effort to reclaim the pages.
In 2009, Lasso started working on his first album with Francisco Díaz, producer of Desorden Público, to produce and mix his album. This process started at Sonofolk, a music studio, between October 2009 and June 2010, and came out with twelve songs.
"By the Time I Get to Phoenix" by Isaac Hayes "Cabin Fever" by Wonder Stuff "Cafe L.A." by Tony Sciuto "Calabasas California 91302" by Albert Hammond "Califormula" by Blackbear "California" by Lana Del Rey "California" by 88rising, Rich Brain, NIKI, Warren Hue "California" by Colonel Loud featuring T.I., Ricco Barrino and Young Dolph
A 2020 list in the Phoenix New Times named it among the 27 best songs about Metro Phoenix, calling it "harshest critique of Arizona, and with good measure". [6] In February 2014, around the time of controversial LGBT-related Arizona SB 1062, Christopher Federico of The Washington Post chose the song for "The week in one song". [7]