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Any old port in a storm lads Whatever that port may be, And thanks be given our Father in Heav'n Who watches o'er you and me, Tho', we're far, far away from the land we seek Where the heart of true love beats warm; For the shelter there, is a haven fair; Any old port in a storm, Any old port in a storm. Close to the vessel the lifeboat rocked
The lyrics and meter are remarkably similar to the first six stanzas of the Egyptian Great Hymn to the Aten [2] written around 1500 BC, which celebrates the rising sun. The lyrics include Biblical references, such as the drowning of Pharaoh and his people in the Red Sea and the defeat of Goliath. Some of the lyrics are said to have been ...
The Empress of Australia operated from Sydney to Hobart and Sydney to Bell Bay/Burnie and back [citation needed]. With the Princess of Tasmania going so well out of Melbourne, there needed to be more capacity on the route, so ANL ordered a new ship to be built at the State Dockyard. The new ship would be bigger, with smaller passenger capacity ...
The same year, the Anti-Nowhere League undertook a twenty nine date UK tour, and PJ left the band after the Glasgow gig in October 2006. His replacement was Dave Hazlewood (Nato), from the small Kent town of Cranbrook, who had filled in before on tours. On 8 November 2006, the ANL began a three-week tour of Australia and New Zealand.
"Until It's Time for You to Go" is a song from the 1965 album Many a Mile by American singer-songwriter Buffy Sainte-Marie. Sainte-Marie included a French-language reworking of the song, "T'es pas un autre", on her 1967 album Fire & Fleet & Candlelight. French translation was made by Quebecer songwriter Claude Gauthier.
[3] This is reflected in lyrics such as "I gotta get away from this day-to-day running around" and "I think I'd like to go back home and take it easy." [2] Music lecturer Ken Bielen interprets the lyrics as suggesting that when the singer obtained what he originally wanted, possibly fame and success, he found them to be "nowhere." [4]
Joke" is the seventh track. Its lyrics are about wanting to start fires. [3] The eight track is "Lydia". Musically, it is a punk rock song. [1] "IDC" is the ninth track. The album closes with the title track and the lead single, [5] "Time to Go Home". The band told The Fader "'Time to go Home' is about treating boredom with substances. It's ...
"Time Passages" is a song by British singer-songwriter Al Stewart, released as a single in 1978. It was produced by Alan Parsons and is the title track of Stewart's 1978 album release . The single reached No. 7 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in December 1978, [ 1 ] and also spent ten weeks at No. 1 on the U.S. Billboard Easy Listening chart ...