After Hours - Music

Music

  • After Hours: Forward to Scotland's Past, a 1987 album by the Battlefield Band
  • After Hours, an album of live jazz recorded in 1941 featuring Charlie Christian and Dizzy Gillespie
  • After Hours (AndrĂ© Previn album), studio album by AndrĂ© Previn
  • After Hours (Avery Parrish song), a blues song by Avery Parrish, first recorded in 1940
  • After Hours (Gary Moore album), a 1992 album by Gary Moore
  • After Hours (John Pizzarelli album), a 1996 album by jazz guitarist John Pizzarelli
  • After Hours (Linda Perry album), a 1999 album by Linda Perry
  • After Hours (Little River Band album), a 1976 album by Little River Band
  • After Hours (Pintop Perkins album), studio album by Pintop Perkins
  • After Hours (radio show), a Canadian jazz program aired on CBC Radio Two from 1993 to 2007
  • After Hours (Sarah Vaughan album), a 1961 album by Sarah Vaughan
  • After Hours (song), a 1969 song by The Velvet Underground
  • After Hours (The Bluetones song), a song by The Bluetones
  • After Hours (We Are Scientists song), a 2008 single by We Are Scientists
  • Afterhours (band), an Italian rock band from Milan, Italy

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Famous quotes containing the word music:

    Thy remembrance, and repentance, and deep musings are not free
    From the music of two voices and the light of one sweet smile.
    Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792–1822)

    While the music is performed, the cameras linger savagely over the faces of the audience. What a bottomless chasm of vacuity they reveal! Those who flock round the Beatles, who scream themselves into hysteria, whose vacant faces flicker over the TV screen, are the least fortunate of their generation, the dull, the idle, the failures . . .
    Paul Johnson (b. 1928)

    If this be love, to clothe me with dark thoughts,
    Haunting untrodden paths to wail apart;
    My pleasures horror, music tragic notes,
    Tears in mine eyes and sorrow at my heart.
    If this be love, to live a living death,
    Then do I love and draw this weary breath.
    Samuel Daniel (1562–1619)