Heroes - Music

Music

Albums
  • "Heroes", an album by David Bowie with Brian Eno, or the title song (see below)
  • Heroes (Cash and Jennings album), an album by Johnny Cash and Waylon Jennings
  • Heroes (Commodores album)
  • Heroes (HOCC album)
  • Heroes (Icehouse album)
  • Heroes (Mark O'Connor album)
  • Heroes (Michael Ball album)
  • Heroes (Paul Overstreet album), or the title song (see below)
  • Heroes (J. J. Johnson album)
  • Heroes (Willie Nelson album)
  • Heroes: Original Score, an album of music from the American TV series Heroes (see below)
  • Heroes: Original Soundtrack, a soundtrack album from the American TV series
  • War Child Presents Heroes, a charity album benefiting War Child
Songs
  • "Heroes" (David Bowie song) composed with Brian Eno
  • "Heroes" (Elena Paparizou song)
  • "Heroes" (Paul Overstreet song)
  • "Heroes" (Shinedown song)
  • "Heroes" (written by Bobby Emmons & Chips Moman) recorded by Johnny Cash & Waylon Jennings
  • "Heroes", a song by David Cook from the album David Cook
Other
  • Héroes del Silencio (or Héroes or HDS), a Spanish rock band
  • Symphony No. 4 (Glass) or "Heroes" Symphony, by Philip Glass, inspired by David Bowie's album

Read more about this topic:  Heroes

Famous quotes containing the word music:

    I fear I agree with your friend in not liking all sermons. Some of them, one has to confess, are rubbish: but then I release my attention from the preacher, and go ahead in any line of thought he may have started: and his after-eloquence acts as a kind of accompaniment—like music while one is reading poetry, which often, to me, adds to the effect.
    Lewis Carroll [Charles Lutwidge Dodgson] (1832–1898)

    Let us describe the education of our men.... What then is the education to be? Perhaps we could hardly find a better than that which the experience of the past has already discovered, which consists, I believe, in gymnastic, for the body, and music for the mind.
    Plato (c. 427–347 B.C.)

    In benevolent natures the impulse to pity is so sudden, that like instruments of music which obey the touch ... you would think the will was scarce concerned, and that the mind was altogether passive in the sympathy which her own goodness has excited. The truth is,—the soul is [so] ... wholly engrossed by the object of pity, that she does not ... take leisure to examine the principles upon which she acts.
    Laurence Sterne (1713–1768)