Bombers (Gary Numan song)

Bombers (Gary Numan song) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bombers (Gary Numan song) - Image via Wikipedia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

“Bombers” is the second single by Tubeway Army, released in 1978. The song is in a somewhat more conventional rock style than their punk-oriented debut, “That’s Too Bad“, and features sound effects simulating air raid sirens, dive bombers, and machine gun fire. Like its predecessor, the single earned indifferent reviews and failed to chart. It is one of the few recordings in his career which Numan did not produce himself.

Though their musical styles differ, the song’s subject matter is generally seen as a thinly disguised rewrite of David Bowie’s “Five Years”, the opening track of The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars (1972). Both songs feature detached observations of urban panic caused by impending catastrophe. “Bombers” (which has nothing to do with another Bowie track of the same name) is sung from the perspective of both a witness on the ground (“Look up, I hear the scream of sirens on the wall”) and the bomber pilot (“And me I know just where you are, you see I’m a bomber man”).

The B-sides were “Blue Eyes”, which harked back to the fast-paced punk style of “That’s Too Bad”, and “O.D. Receiver”, a slower piece whose lyrics reflected a Burroughsian world of drug addiction. All tracks on the original vinyl single were credited to ‘Valerian’, the name that Numan (born Gary Webb) had chosen for himself prior to Tubeway Army’s debut; these would be his last releases using that nom de plume; henceforward he would call himself Gary Numan.

“Bombers” was also later released as a gatefold with the single “That’s Too Bad”

via Bombers (Gary Numan song) – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

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Big Jet Plane

Big Jet Plane - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Big Jet Plane - Image via Wikipedia

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Big Jet Plane EP is a 2010 extended play (EP) by Australian sibling singer-songwriter duo Angus and Julia Stone. The EP includes four tracks, three of which can be found on other Angus & Julia Stone albums.

The title track also features on the 2010 album Down the Way, released by the Nettwerk Music Group (Vancouver). The song is a modified version of a song released by Angus Stone as part of solo project Lady of the Sunshine, and featured on the 2009 album Smoking Gun.

“Big Jet Plane” was named Australian Recording Industry Association‘s Single of the Year for 2010 at the ARIA Music Awards of 2010, while Down the Way was named Album of the Year.

“Big Jet Plane” featured on both Nova 100 and Triple J radio playlists and after winning Single of the Year was added to the playlists of stations such as Fox FM in Melbourne.

The week following the ARIA Music Awards of 2010, the song made a massive leap from #47 to #21 on the ARIA Chart, giving the song its peak position in its 22nd week of release. In total the song has spent 33 weeks in Australia’s ARIA Charts.

“Big Jet Plane” has received a gold accreditation, having sold over 35,000 copies in Australia.

On 26 January 2011 the song was voted number 1 on the Triple J Hottest 100, 2010. This caused another boost in sales and saw it reach #6 on Australia’s iTunes songs chart, and re-enter the ARIA Charts at #32.

The song can be heard in the 2010 film Easy A.

The tail number VH-TAP on the aircraft shown on the album cover of identifies the aircraft as a Trans Australian Airlines Convair CV-240 piston-powered aircraft and is not a jet plane.

via Big Jet Plane – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

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Amelia Earhart’s Last Flight

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Amelia Earhart’s Last Flight” is a song written by Red River Dave McEnery shortly after Amelia Earhart‘s disappearance.

It was copyrighted in 1939, and was first performed by David McEnery on a pioneer television broadcast from the 1939 New York World’s Fair.

It has maintained continued popularity since then, including covers by artists including Kinky Friedman, The Greenbriar Boys and the Country Gentlemen. Saskatoon-based band The Heartstrings covered the song, and used the second line of the chorus as the title of their 2009 album Far Away in a Land That is Fair.

via Amelia Earhart’s Last Flight – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

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Airplanes (song)

Single by B.o.B featuring Hayley Williams from the album B.o.B Presents: The Adventures of Bobby Ray

Single by B.o.B featuring Hayley Williams from the album B.o.B Presents: The Adventures of Bobby Ray

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

“Airplanes” is the second official and third overall single from B.o.B’s debut studio album, B.o.B Presents: The Adventures of Bobby Ray. The track features Hayley Williams and was produced by Alex da Kid with DJ Frank E receiving a co-production credit on the song. The music and chorus were written by Kinetics & One Love. The song was released to urban radio on April 27, 2010.

“Airplanes” reached number one in the United Kingdom, and also in New Zealand, as well as the top three in Australia, Canada, the Republic of Ireland and the United States. “Airplanes, Part II”, the sequel to the song, features rapper Eminem as well as Williams. This collaboration led to a Grammy nomination for Best Pop Collaboration With Vocals.

via Airplanes (song) – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

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Aces High (song)

"Aces High" Single by Iron Maiden from the album Powerslave

"Aces High" Single by Iron Maiden from the album Powerslave

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“Aces High” is a song by British heavy metal band Iron Maiden, written by bassist Steve Harris. It is Iron Maiden’s eleventh single and the second from the 1984 studio album Powerslave. The song tells the story of a British RAF pilot fighting against the German Luftwaffe during the Battle of Britain (1940), the first battle to be completely fought by aircraft.

Aces High is one of Iron Maiden’s most popular songs, and has been covered numerous times, by bands including Arch Enemy and Children of Bodom. It was released as a single over a month after Powerslave came out. It was featured on the video game Madden NFL 10 as part of the game’s soundtrack and on the MTV show Nitro Circus, it also features in Steve Peat‘s segment on the mountain bike film on New World Disorder III. Colin Mckay used it on his part of the skate video Plan B Questionable as well.

When performed live – as seen in among others, Live After Death and Iron Maiden: Flight 666 – it is usually preceded by Winston Churchill’s famous “We shall fight on the beaches” speech with the sound of planes in the background.

The first B-side is a cover of Nektar’s “King of Twilight”, from their 1972 album A Tab in the Ocean. Their cover is actually a medley of the songs “Crying in the Dark” and “King of Twilight”, the last two songs on the album.

via Aces High (song) – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

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