Crossroads - Music

Music

  • "Cross Road Blues", a blues song by Robert Johnson, later recorded as "Crossroads" by many other musicians
  • Crossroads (Tracy Chapman album), or the title track
  • Cross Road, a 1994 compilation album by Bon Jovi
  • Crossroads (Eric Clapton album)
    • its sequel, Crossroads 2: Live in the Seventies (box set)
  • Crossroads Guitar Festival, a three-day blues and rock concert arranged by Eric Clapton
  • "Tha Crossroads", a 1996 Grammy Award winning single by Bone Thugs-n-Harmony
    • "Crossroads", a 2002 UK number one single from Blazin' Squad based on the above
  • "Crossroads", Don McLean song, from American Pie (album)
  • "Crossroads", song by LL Cool J, from the album 14 Shots to the Dome
  • "Crossroads", a single by Avenged Sevenfold from Live in the LBC & Diamonds in the Rough
  • Crossroads (Sylver album), 2006
  • Crossroad (Masami Okui album), 2002
  • Crossroads (quartet), winner of the 2009 BHS international quartet championship
  • "Crossroad" (song), a 2010 Ayumi Hamasaki song
  • "Cross Road" (song), by Mr. Children
  • "Crossroads", a John Mayer song from his album Battle Studies

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Famous quotes containing the word music:

    How little it takes to make us happy! The sound of a bagpipe.—Without music life would be a mistake. The German even imagines God as singing songs.
    Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900)

    If music in general is an imitation of history, opera in particular is an imitation of human willfulness; it is rooted in the fact that we not only have feelings but insist upon having them at whatever cost to ourselves.... The quality common to all the great operatic roles, e.g., Don Giovanni, Norma, Lucia, Tristan, Isolde, Brünnhilde, is that each of them is a passionate and willful state of being. In real life they would all be bores, even Don Giovanni.
    —W.H. (Wystan Hugh)

    As polishing expresses the vein in marble, and grain in wood, so music brings out what of heroic lurks anywhere. The hero is the sole patron of music.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)