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The soundtrack was digitally released on May 2, 2024 coinciding with the film's streaming release on Amazon Prime Video, while it was released in CD and vinyl LP, the following day. [11] [12] An accompanying deluxe edition featuring live performances of four songs from the band was released on the same day as the film.
Anonymous broadside, Angus, Newcastle, 1774–1825. "The Twelve Days of Christmas" is a cumulative song, meaning that each verse is built on top of the previous verses. There are twelve verses, each describing a gift given by "my true love" on one of the twelve days of Christmas. There are many variations in the lyrics.
Sheet music copyright 1925 by Leo Feist, Inc. Music by Ray Henderson, Lyrics by Sam M. Lewis & Joseph Widow Young. Ukulele arrangement by May Singhi Breen. v. t. e. " Five Foot Two, Eyes of Blue (Has Anybody Seen My Girl?) " is an American popular song that achieved its greatest popularity in the 1920s. As of January 1, 2021, the song has ...
Push Ups (song) " Push Ups " is a diss track by Canadian rapper Drake, released on April 19, 2024. The track serves as a response to several songs (primarily "Like That") from Metro Boomin and Future 's collaborative albums We Don't Trust You and We Still Don't Trust You (both 2024). [1] ". Push Ups" targets Metro Boomin, Future, Kendrick Lamar ...
In 1995 in the ER Season 2 episode "Hell and High Water", the character Doug Ross tells a child to keep singing the song to keep himself conscious. The 2001 children's book Take Me Out of the Bathtub and other Silly Dilly Songs by Alan Katz and David Catrow, featuring silly words to well-known tunes, recast the end of the chorus as "I used one ...
The Oxford Dictionary of Nursery Rhymes by Iona and Peter Opie traces this song back to an earlier folk ballad, recorded between 1770 and 1780, whose lyrics are: [2] [3] [4] O what can the matter be. And what can the matter be. O what can the matter be. Johnny bydes lang at the fair. He'll buy me a twopenny whistle. He'll buy me a threepenny fair.
Flow, my tears. " Flow, my tears " (originally Early Modern English: Flow my teares fall from your springs) is a lute song (specifically, an "ayre") by the accomplished lutenist and composer John Dowland (1563–1626). Originally composed as an instrumental under the name "Lachrimae pavane" in 1596, it is Dowland's most famous ayre, [1] and ...