Wasteland - Music

Music

  • "Wasteland" (Maxïmo Park song), on the War Child charity album Help: A Day in the Life
  • "Wasteland" (10 Years song), a 2005 single by rock band 10 Years
  • "Wastland", a song by The Mission UK
  • "Wasteland" (Billy Idol song), a 1993 single by Billy Idol from the Cyberpunk album
  • "Wasteland" (Poison song), a song by Poison from their 2002 album Hollyweird
  • "Wasteland" (The View song), a song by The View from their debut album Hats Off to the Buskers
  • "The Wasteland" (Elton John song), a song by Elton John from his album Songs From The West Coast
  • Wasteland (Atargatis album), a 2006 album by Atargatis
  • Wasteland (The Jam album), a 1992 album by The Jam
  • The Waste Lands (album), a 1992 album by Venom
  • "Baba O'Riley", the 1971 song by the English rock band The Who, is often called "Teenage Wasteland" after the phrase repeated throughout the song
  • "Wasteland," a song by Trapt from their 2008 album Only Through the Pain

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Famous quotes containing the word music:

    During the cattle drives, Texas cowboy music came into national significance. Its practical purpose is well known—it was used primarily to keep the herds quiet at night, for often a ballad sung loudly and continuously enough might prevent a stampede. However, the cowboy also sang because he liked to sing.... In this music of the range and trail is “the grayness of the prairies, the mournful minor note of a Texas norther, and a rhythm that fits the gait of the cowboy’s pony.”
    —Administration in the State of Texa, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)

    Orpheus with his lute made trees
    And the mountain tops that freeze
    Bow themselves when he did sing.
    To his music plants and flowers
    Ever sprung, as sun and showers
    There had made a lasting spring.
    William Shakespeare (1564–1616)

    Poetry is either something that lives like fire inside you—like music to the musician or Marxism to the Communist—or else it is nothing, an empty formalized bore around which pedants can endlessly drone their notes and explanations.
    F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896–1940)