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The song brought light to the famine

Posted: Tue Jan 21, 2025 10:24 am
by fathema022796
The track was written by Bob Geldof and Mickey Ure as a response to the devastating famine in Ethiopia in the 1990s. It was recorded over the course of a few days by a supergroup that included British and Irish stars including Bono and Sting. and became the fastest-selling single in the UK charts at the time, selling 10,000 copies in its first week. It's a mess though. African activists took to Twitter to point out that the song encapsulates the continent's view that Western colonialism is doing more harm than good.

Totally agree with Dominic the Donkey by Lou Monte If uruguay phone number library you want to hear the story of a donkey delivering Brooklyn-made gifts to all the pregnant children in Italy then this story is for you! If you've never wished for a Christmas Donkey to be immortalized in song then you're not alone and like us you might find Dominic Donkey a bit jarring. Photo credit Loumont Dominic is a worthy horse There is no reindeer game for him on Christmas Eve.

In fact, he was so serious about what he was doing that the song reached No. 1 on the Hot 100 singles chart in 2011. Yes indeed. But the so-called charm of Italian ballads can't make up for the earworm's Christmas shoes that keep belting out the chorus of "hip-hop, hip-hop!" If Mom Meets Jesus Tonight I Hope She Looks Beautiful, the child protagonist of a holiday song that transcends manipulation said. For those unfamiliar with the song's narrative it's about a little boy who wants to buy some shoes for his terminally ill mother but like most kids he's short of cash.