 | Devil Ridge @ The Sting- Cowboy Rides Away and Pretty Woman!
Tags: band, bar, country, dance, lubbock, music, pool, sting, western
Description: The Cowboy Rides Away" - George Strait and Halfway Through (The last song of the night) They do a song "for the ladies," Pretty Woman, You can tell everyone was having a great time, Dark video, but its a bar...come on, it was a lot lighter in person. Come out! 69th and Slide , www.myspace.com/lubbocksting
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 | This Cowboy Song - Sting Album Fields Of Gold
Tags: 00s, album, cellphone, charts, Cowboy, Fields, Gold, mp3, music, musik, Pop, Ringtone, Song, Sting, This
Description: Get the full Ringtone:
http://This_Cowboy_Song_-_Sting__Album_Fields_O.ringtone.ath.cx/?id=487922 - This Cowboy Song - Sting | Album: Fields Of Gold
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 | San Diego, California
Tags: balboa, bay, california, catholic, church, conception, diego, house, immaculate, mission, old, park, san, town
Description: old town,state historic park,san diego house, theatre, mission bay, market, balboa park, catholic church of the immaculate conception (1850), from San Diego in California. musics : sting "this cowboy song", etienne daho "cowboy".
centre historique de san diego en californie avec la chapelle (catholique) de l'immaculée conception la plus vieille église de san diego construite en 1850.
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 | Cowboy Bebop AMV - Shape of my Heart
Tags: amv, anime, bebop, boldizy, cowboy, doomstake, episode, fight, final, heart, music, my, of, sad, shape, spike, sting, vicious, video, vs
Description: For the better quality version visit:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xhQujAAxlMw&fmt=6
Pleas comment and rate, and if you like my work subscribe.
Anime used was cowboy bebop, clips from the last episode.
Song used was Shape of my Heart by sting.
Program used was Windows movie maker (IT SUCKS MAJOR BALLS).
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 | Alacran y Pistolero Music Video
Tags: alacran, Chingon, cowboy, guitar, gunman, music, pistolero, robert, rodriguez, video, western
Description: Music video I made a couple years back using the Chingon song "Alacran y Pistolero"
It tells the story of a gunman who protects a town, and how he ironically meets his end from a scorpion's poisonous sting.
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 | Fields Of Gold
Tags: 's, field, Fields, gold, music, of, original, sting, summoner, Summoner's, Tales, Ten, track, video
Description: Gently Offered By UMG ( Universal Music Group )
Fields Of Gold
Words And Music By Sting
You'll remember me when the west wind moves
Upon the fields of barley
You'll forget the sun in his jealous sky
As we walk in the fields of gold
So she took her love
For to gaze awhile
Upon the fields of barley
In his arms she fell as her hair came down
Among the fields of gold
Will you stay with me, will you be my love
Among the fields of barley
We'll forget the sun in his jealous sky
As we lie in the fields of gold
See the west wind move like a lover so
Upon the fields of barley
Feel her body rise when you kiss her mouth
Among the fields of gold
I never made promises lightly
And there have been some that I've broken
But I swear in the days still left
We'll walk in the fields of gold
We'll walk in the fields of gold
Many years have passed since those summer days
Among the fields of barley
See the children run as the sun goes down
Among the fields of gold
You'll remember me when the west wind moves
Upon the fields of barley
You can tell the sun in his jealous sky
When we walked in the fields of gold
When we walked in the fields of gold
When we walked in the fields of gold
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Fields of Gold: The Best of Sting 1984-1994 is the first compilation issued by Sting. It features hit singles from his studio albums The Dream of the Blue Turtles, ...Nothing Like the Sun, The Soul Cages, and Ten Summoner's Tales. The album features two new songs, "When We Dance" and "This Cowboy Song", which were both released as singles. An alternate version of "We'll Be Together" is also featured. While the liner notes do not mention this, the version of "Why Should I Cry For You" on this compilation differs from the one on The Soul Cages (A&M 75021 6405 2). The 17 track international version contains 5 tracks not included on the 14 track U.S. release, but does not include "Be Still My Beating Heart" or "Fortress Around Your Heart".
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 | I Love This Bar
Tags: Buck, Keith, Norris, Toby
Description: Stereo: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZWECaR-pMpo&fmt=18
Buck Norris sings "I Love This Bar" by Toby Keith.
Toby Keith spent the '90s as a solid, workmanlike country star who met with considerable chart success, yet never quite broke free of the neo-traditionalist pack to become a household name like Garth Brooks or Alan Jackson. That all changed in 2002 when he recorded "Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue (The Angry American)," a response to September 11 that became one of country's most highly charged political statements since Merle Haggard's "Okie from Muskogee." The media furor ensured that even people with no knowledge of country music still knew him as "the guy with the 'boot in the ass' song," and helped make Keith a genuine phenomenon. Yet he'd been recording for nearly a decade prior and already had several chart-topping country singles to his credit.
Keith was born Toby Keith Covel in Clinton, OK, in 1961 and grew up mostly on a farm in Moore, near the outskirts of Oklahoma City. He took up guitar at age eight, inspired by the country musicians who played at the supper club his grandmother ran. He listened to his father's Bob Wills records and fell in love with Haggard's music. He worked as a rodeo hand while in high school, and after graduation, he found work in the nearby oil fields. In the meantime, he formed the Easy Money Band and played Alabama-style country-rock in area honky tonks. After about three years, the oil industry hit a major downturn, and Keith turned to playing semipro football for a USFL farm team, even trying out (unsuccessfully) for the short-lived league's Oklahoma City franchise. Following two years as a football player, Keith decided to focus on music and adopted a much more rigorous touring schedule. He cut a few records for local indie labels, and his demo tape eventually found its way to onetime Alabama producer Harold Shedd, who helped Keith land a deal with Mercury.
Keith's self-titled debut album was released in 1993 and made him an out-of-the-box success with its chart-topping single "Should've Been a Cowboy." Three more songs from the record -- "Wish I Didn't Know Now," "A Little Less Talk and a Lot More Action," and "He Ain't Worth Missing" -- made the Top Five, and the album sold over two million copies. "Who's That Man," the lead single from his second album, Boomtown, was released in late 1994 and became his second number one; Boomtown hit stores in early 1995 and went gold on the strength of further Top Ten hits "Upstairs Downtown" and "You Ain't Much Fun." Keith followed it later that year with the holiday record Christmas to Christmas and returned with the proper album Blue Moon in 1996. Its first two singles, "A Woman's Touch" and "Does That Blue Moon Ever Shine on You," went Top Ten, and the third, "Me Too," gave Keith his third number one, also helping the album go platinum. Released in 1997, Dream Walkin' marked his first collaboration with prolific producer James Stroud, with whom he would work regularly from then on. "We Were in Love" and the title track were both Top Five hits, as was "I'm So Happy I Can't Stop Crying," a duet with Sting. However, Keith longed for an even bigger breakthrough, and he was growing dissatisfied with Mercury's promotional efforts. In 1999, he left the label and followed Stroud over to the Nashville division of DreamWorks.
Keith's label debut, How Do You Like Me Now?!, appeared in late 1999 and started to bring him the wider recognition he felt poised for. The title cut went to number one on the country charts and brought him his first Top 40 pop hit; its follow-up, "Country Comes to Town," went Top Five, and "You Shouldn't Kiss Me Like This" also hit number one. Overall, the album had a rough, brash attitude that helped give Keith a stronger identity as a performer. It was also the first to bring him those long-desired major industry awards, when in 2001 the Academy of Country Music named him Male Vocalist of the Year and named How Do You Like Me Now?! its Album of the Year. In the meantime, Keith became more visible in the mainstream media, making cameos on Touched by an Angel and in a Dukes of Hazzard TV reunion movie as well as co-starring in a series of telephone commercials. Later in 2001, his follow-up album, Pull My Chain, became his first to top the country charts and also his first Top Ten pop album. It spun off three number one singles: "I'm Just Talkin' About Tonight," "I Wanna Talk About Me," and "My List."
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 | Big Blue Note
Tags: Buck, Classic, Country, Keith, Norris, Toby
Description: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q79vfZjXtAE&fmt=18
Buck sings Big Blue Note by Toby Keith.
Toby Keith spent the '90s as a solid, workmanlike country star who met with considerable chart success, yet never quite broke free of the neo-traditionalist pack to become a household name like Garth Brooks or Alan Jackson. That all changed in 2002 when he recorded "Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue (The Angry American)," a response to September 11 that became one of country's most highly charged political statements since Merle Haggard's "Okie from Muskogee." The media furor ensured that even people with no knowledge of country music still knew him as "the guy with the 'boot in the ass' song," and helped make Keith a genuine phenomenon. Yet he'd been recording for nearly a decade prior and already had several chart-topping country singles to his credit.
Keith was born Toby Keith Covel in Clinton, OK, in 1961 and grew up mostly on a farm in Moore, near the outskirts of Oklahoma City. He took up guitar at age eight, inspired by the country musicians who played at the supper club his grandmother ran. He listened to his father's Bob Wills records and fell in love with Haggard's music. He worked as a rodeo hand while in high school, and after graduation, he found work in the nearby oil fields. In the meantime, he formed the Easy Money Band and played Alabama-style country-rock in area honky tonks. After about three years, the oil industry hit a major downturn, and Keith turned to playing semipro football for a USFL farm team, even trying out (unsuccessfully) for the short-lived league's Oklahoma City franchise. Following two years as a football player, Keith decided to focus on music and adopted a much more rigorous touring schedule. He cut a few records for local indie labels, and his demo tape eventually found its way to onetime Alabama producer Harold Shedd, who helped Keith land a deal with Mercury.
Keith's self-titled debut album was released in 1993 and made him an out-of-the-box success with its chart-topping single "Should've Been a Cowboy." Three more songs from the record -- "Wish I Didn't Know Now," "A Little Less Talk and a Lot More Action," and "He Ain't Worth Missing" -- made the Top Five, and the album sold over two million copies. "Who's That Man," the lead single from his second album, Boomtown, was released in late 1994 and became his second number one; Boomtown hit stores in early 1995 and went gold on the strength of further Top Ten hits "Upstairs Downtown" and "You Ain't Much Fun." Keith followed it later that year with the holiday record Christmas to Christmas and returned with the proper album Blue Moon in 1996. Its first two singles, "A Woman's Touch" and "Does That Blue Moon Ever Shine on You," went Top Ten, and the third, "Me Too," gave Keith his third number one, also helping the album go platinum. Released in 1997, Dream Walkin' marked his first collaboration with prolific producer James Stroud, with whom he would work regularly from then on. "We Were in Love" and the title track were both Top Five hits, as was "I'm So Happy I Can't Stop Crying," a duet with Sting. However, Keith longed for an even bigger breakthrough, and he was growing dissatisfied with Mercury's promotional efforts. In 1999, he left the label and followed Stroud over to the Nashville division of DreamWorks.
Keith's label debut, How Do You Like Me Now?!, appeared in late 1999 and started to bring him the wider recognition he felt poised for. The title cut went to number one on the country charts and brought him his first Top 40 pop hit; its follow-up, "Country Comes to Town," went Top Five, and "You Shouldn't Kiss Me Like This" also hit number one. Overall, the album had a rough, brash attitude that helped give Keith a stronger identity as a performer. It was also the first to bring him those long-desired major industry awards, when in 2001 the Academy of Country Music named him Male Vocalist of the Year and named How Do You Like Me Now?! its Album of the Year. In the meantime, Keith became more visible in the mainstream media, making cameos on Touched by an Angel and in a Dukes of Hazzard TV reunion movie as well as co-starring in a series of telephone commercials. Later in 2001, his follow-up album, Pull My Chain, became his first to top the country charts and also his first Top Ten pop album. It spun off three number one singles: "I'm Just Talkin' About Tonight," "I Wanna Talk About Me," and "My List."
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 | A song for everyone 2 - Fruits Basket
Tags: amv, basket, everyone, fruits, furuba, song
Description: NOT MADE BY ME!!
Anime: Fruits Basket
Songs:
Blue - Cowboy Bebop
Gangsta's Paradise - Coolio
Asshole - Dennis Leary
Every breath you take - Sting
Jeepers creepers - Frank Sinatra
AMV made by FangirlFriday studios
Link at amv.org: http://www.animemusicvideos.org/members/members_videoinfo.php?vid_id=18234
This is the second (and last) part of the "A song for everyone". It rawks. totally.
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 | My mother's favorite movies: A montage. By Clara.
Tags: burt, chaplin, cinema, classic, comedy, films, godfather, lancaster, man, moments, montage, newman, paul, scenes, the, third
Description: My Christmas present for my mother this year, a selection of clips from her favorite movies with the main theme of "The Sting" by Scott Joplin, the Harry Lime theme from "The Third Man" by Anton Karas and the classical piece "Cavalleria Rusticana" by Pietro Mascagni, extracted from the soundtrack of "The Godfather III".
Clips from:
- "Silverado" by Lawrence Kasdan
- "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" by George Roy Hill
- "Sleeping Beauty" by Clide Geronimi
- "Hero" by Stephen Frears
- "The Untouchables" by Brain de Palma
- "Purple Rose of Cairo" by Woody Allen
- "The color of money" de Martin Scorsese
- "Little big man" by Arthur Penn
- "Working girl" by Mike Nichols
- "The Sting" by George Roy Hill
- "Field of dreams" by Phil Alden Robinson
- "Life of Brian" by Terry Jones
- "High Noon" by Fred Zinneman
- "Some like it hot" by Billy Wilder
- "Modern times" by Charles Chaplin
- "Rosemary's baby" by Roman Polanski
- "The big chill" by Lawrence Kasdan
- "The sound of music" by Robert Wise
- "The Great Dictator" by Charles Chaplin
- "The Third Man" by Carol Reed
- "Sleuth" by Joseph L. Mankiewicz
- "Meet John Doe" by Frank Capra
- "To be or not to be" by Ernst Lubitsch
- "Il Gattopardo" by Luchino Visconti
- "The Godfather" trilogy by Francis Ford Coppola
- "The age of innocence" by Martin Scorsese
- "Rebecca" by Alfred Hitchcock
- "Witness" by Peter Weir
- "The deer hunter" by Michael Cimino
- "West Side Story" by Robert Wise
- "The year of living dangerously" by Peter Weir
- "From here to eternity" by Fred Zinneman
- "Thelma and Louise" by Ridley Scott
- "Dead poets society" by Peter Weir
- "Paths of glory" by Stanley Kubrick
- "Midnight Cowboy" by John Schlesinger
- "To kill a mockingbird" by Robert Mulligan
- "Lady Hawke" by Richard Donner
- "Cider House Rules" by Lasse Hälstrom
- "Grand Canyon" by Lawrence Kasdan
I used to watch classic comedies with my mother when I was a little girl, she tought me to love black and white cinema. She's always been crazy about Paul Newman and Burt Lancaster, she has a great taste :)
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 | Oscar Best Pictures
Tags: Academy, Award, Best, Bjork, It's, Oh, Oscar, Picture, Quiet, So
Description: Not all of the Best Pictures are actually on here. But this is a list of the movies I think should have won and it also contains winners that did deserve the award. Enjoy. Music: Bjork-It's Oh So Quiet.
Here are the films I listed.
1. Wings
2. Broadway Melody
3. All Quiet on the Western Front
4. Cimarron
5. Grand Hotel
6. I Am a Fugitive From a Chain Gang in place of Cavalcade
7. It Happened One Night
8. Mutiny on the Bounty
9. Dodsworth in place of The Great Ziegfeld
10. The Awful Truth in place of The Life of Emile Zola
11. The Adventures of Robin Hood in place of You Can't Take It With You
12. Gone with the Wind
13. Rebecca
14. Citizen Kane in place of How Green Was My Valley
15. The Magnificent Ambersons in place of Mrs. Miniver
16. Casablanca
17. Double Indemnity in place of Going My Way
18. The Lost Weekend
19. It's a Wonderful Life in place of The Best Years of Our Lives
20. Great Expectations in place of Gentleman's Agreement
21. The Treasure of the Sierra Madre in place of Hamlet
22. The Heiress in place of All the King's Men
23. Sunset Blvd. in place of All About Eve
24. A Streetcar Named Desire in place of An American in Paris
25. High Noon in place of The Greatest Show on Earth
26. Roman Holiday in place of From Here to Eternity
27. On the Waterfront
28. Mister Roberts in place of Marty
29. The Ten Commandments in place of Around the World in 80 Days
30. 12 Angry Men in place of The Bridge on the River Kwai
31. Cat on a Hot Tin Roof in place of Gigi
32. Ben Hur
33. The Apartment
34. West Side Story
35. Lawrence of Arabia
36. Lilies of the Field in place of Tom Jones
37. Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb in place of My Fair Lady
38. Doctor Zhivago in place of The Sound of Music
39. A Man for All Seasons
40. The Graduate in place of In the Heat of the Night
41. Lion in the Winter in place of Oliver!
42. Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid in place of Midnight Cowboy
43. Patton
44. A Clockwork Orange in place of The French Connection
45. The Godfather
46. The Sting
47. The Godfather Part II
48. One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
49. Taxi Driver in place of Rocky
50. Star Wars in place of Annie Hall
51. Deer Hunter
52. Apocalypse Now in place of Kramer vs. Kramer
53. Raging Bull in place of Ordinary People
54. Raiders of the Lost Ark in place of Chariots of Fire
55. Gandhi
56. The Right Stuff in place of Terms of Endearment
57. Amadeus
58. The Color Purple in place of Out of Africa
59. Platoon
60. The Last Emperor
61. Rain Man
62. Dead Poets Society in place of Driving Miss Daisy
63. Goodfellas in place of Dances with Wolves
64. The Silence of the Lambs
65. Unforgiven
66. Schindler's List
67. The Shawshank Redemption in place of Forrest Gump
68. Braveheart
69. Fargo in place of The English Patient
70. L.A. Confidential in place of Titanic
71. Saving Private Ryan in place of Shakespeare in Love
72. American Beauty
73. Gladiator
74. The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring in place of A Beautiful Mind
75. The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers in place of Chicago
76. The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
77. Million Dollar Baby
78. Brokeback Mountain in place of Crash
79. The Departed
80. There Will Be Blood in place of No Country for Old Men
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