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Off to the Races (song) " Off to the Races " is a song by American singer and songwriter Lana Del Rey. First appearing on her self-titled Interscope debut, the song was re-released on her second studio album, Born to Die (2012). The song was written by Del Rey and Tim Larcombe.
Off to the Races. (1959) Byrd in Hand. (1959) Off to the Races is an album by American jazz trumpeter Donald Byrd recorded on December 21, 1958 and released on Blue Note the following year. [2]
The lyrics of "Off to the Races" have been called "a freak show of inappropriate co-dependency", [29] with a chorus that recalls Sheryl Crow's "down and out drunken loner persona" in her 1994 single "Leaving Las Vegas". [29] Pryia Elan of NME noted that the track "almost falls under the weight of this persona. There's none of 'Video Games''s ...
Blaydon Races. " Blaydon Races " ( Roud #3511) is a Geordie folk song of 1862, with lyrics by George Ridley written in a style deriving from music hall. It celebrates the horse races held at Blaydon in North East England that year, although mostly composed in advance of the event.
You don't have to spend a fortune to drink great whiskey made in the U.S. From Wilderness Trail Bourbon to Booker's Bourbon, here are 10 bottles to pick up at the liquor store.
"De Camptown Races" or "Gwine to Run All Night" (nowadays popularly known as "Camptown Races") is a minstrel song by American Romantic composer Stephen Foster. It was published in February 1850 by F. D. Benteen and was introduced to the American mainstream by Christy's Minstrels , eventually becoming one of the most popular folk/ Americana ...
"The Race Is On" is a song written by Don Rollins [1] (not to be confused with the Don Rollins who co-wrote "It's Five O'Clock Somewhere" for Alan Jackson and Jimmy Buffett) and made a hit on the country music charts by George Jones and on the pop and easy listening charts by the unrelated Jack Jones. George's version was the first single ...
Included on the group's 1972 album Be Altitude: Respect Yourself, "I'll Take You There" features lead singer Mavis Staples inviting her listeners to seek Heaven.The song is almost completely a call-and-response chorus, with the introduction and bassline being lifted—uncredited—from "The Liquidator", a 1969 reggae hit written by Harry Johnson and performed by the Harry J Allstars.