Home
File:Stephanie‑mills‑home‑1989.jpg
Studio album by Stephanie Mills
Released June 26, 1989
Recorded 1988 - 1989
Genre R&B
Length 68:35
Label MCA
Producer Wayne Brathwaite, Barry J. Eastmond, Marc Gordon, Timmy Gatling, Gene Griffin, Cassandra Mills, Alton "Wokie" Stewart
Stephanie Mills chronology
If I Were Your Woman
(1987)
Home
(1989)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4/5 stars [1]

Home is a studio album by Stephanie Mills. It was released June 26, 1989 on MCA Records.

Contents

Track listing [link]

  1. "Something in the Way (You Make Me Feel)" - 5:27
  2. "Real Love" - 6:47
  3. "Home" - 5:25
  4. "So Good, So Right" - 6:03
  5. "Comfort of a Man" - 5:49
  6. "I Come To You" - 4:30
  7. "Good Girl Gone Bad" - 4:46
  8. "Ain't No Cookin'" - 5:08
  9. "Fast Talk" - 5:07
  10. "Love Hasn't Been Easy On Me" - 4:43
  11. "I'm More Than a Woman" - 5:28
  12. "Something In The Way (You Make Me Feel)" (Extended Version) - 9:22

Charts [link]

Chart (1989) Peak
position
Billboard 200[2] 82
Billboard Top R&B Albums[2] 5

References [link]

External links [link]



https://wn.com/Home_(Stephanie_Mills_album)

Home (Hothouse Flowers album)

Home is the second album by the Irish rock band Hothouse Flowers. Released in 1990 via London Records, it reached number 2 on the UK Albums Chart and spent 1 week at number 1 on the Australian charts. The band did an extended tour in Australia, and had built up a significant following there, which may have contributed to their success in the charts. Two singles from the album charted in the United Kingdom: "Give It Up" (#30) and "I Can See Clearly Now" (#23). "Give It Up" also charted in the United States (#2 Modern Rock Tracks/#29 Mainstream Rock Tracks).

Track listing

All songs written by Hothouse Flowers, except where noted.

  • "Hardstone City" – 3:45
  • "Give It Up" – 3:31
  • "Christchurch Bells" – 3:51
  • "Sweet Marie" – 6:06
  • "Giving It All Away" – 3:49
  • "Shut up and Listen" – 4:08
  • "I Can See Clearly Now" – 4:53 (Johnny Nash)
  • "Movies" – 4:39
  • "Eyes Wide Open" – 3:15
  • "Water" – 4:10
  • "Home" – 4:28
  • "Trying to Get Through" – 4:24
  • "Dance to the Storm" – 4:13
  • "Seoladh Na Ngamhna" – :42 (traditional)
  • Home! (Gary Bartz album)

    Home! is a live album by saxophonist Gary Bartz's NTU Troop recorded in 1969 and released on the Milestone label.


    Reception

    Allmusic awarded the album 3 stars.

    Track listing

    All compositions by Gary Bartz except as indicated

  • "B.A.M." - 11:17
  • "Love" - 11:28
  • "Rise" - 8:45
  • "Amal" - 7:18
  • "It Don't Mean a Thing" (Duke Ellington, Irving Mills) - 5:12
  • Personnel

  • Gary Bartz - alto saxophone, bells, steel drums
  • Woody Shaw - trumpet
  • Albert Daily - piano
  • Bob Cunningham - bass
  • Rashied Ali - drums
  • References

    List of Forgotten Realms deities

    This is a list of Forgotten Realms deities. They are all deities that appear in the fictional Forgotten Realms campaign setting of the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game.

    Forgotten Realms vs. core D&D

    The deities of other Dungeons & Dragons campaign settings, including those of the default (or "core") setting for the Dungeons & Dragons game, are not generally a part of Forgotten Realms. However, there is some overlap, especially among the deities of nonhuman races. Lolth, the principal deity of the drow in the Forgotten Realms, is specifically described as being the same deity as Lolth in other campaign settings. No mention is made as to whether other deities shared between Forgotten Realms and other campaign settings are intended to represent the same divine entity.

    Deities are included in this list only when documented in a Forgotten Realms-specific source or otherwise clearly indicated as existing in the setting. For deities in the core setting, see List of deities of Dungeons & Dragons.

    Mask (film)

    Mask is a 1985 American drama film directed by Peter Bogdanovich, starring Cher, Sam Elliott, and Eric Stoltz. Dennis Burkley and Laura Dern are featured in supporting roles. Cher received the 1985 Cannes Film Festival award for Best Actress. The film is based on the life and early death of Roy L. "Rocky" Dennis, a boy who suffered from craniodiaphyseal dysplasia, an extremely rare disorder known commonly as lionitis due to the disfiguring cranial enlargements that it causes. Mask won the Academy Award for Best Makeup while Cher and Stoltz received Golden Globe nominations for their performances.

    Plot

    In 1978 Azusa, California, Rocky Dennis (Eric Stoltz), who suffers from a skull deformity, is accepted without question by his freewheeling biker mother's boyfriends, his "extended motorcycle family," and his maternal grandparents, who share his love of baseball card collecting; but is treated with fear, pity, awkwardness, and teasing by those unaware of his humanity, humor, and intelligence. Rocky's mother, Florence "Rusty" Dennis (Cher), is determined to give Rocky as normal a life as possible, in spite of her own wild ways as a member of the Turks biker gang, as well as her strained relationship with her parents. She fights for Rocky's inclusion in a mainstream junior high school, and confronts a principal who would rather classify Rocky as mentally retarded and relegate him to a special education school, despite the fact that his condition hasn't affected his intelligence.

    Mask (2015 TV series)

    Mask (Hangul: 가면; RR: Gamyeon) is a 2015 South Korean television series starring Soo Ae, Ju Ji-hoon, Yeon Jung-hoon and Yoo In-young. It aired on SBS from May 27 to July 30, 2015 on Wednesdays and Thursdays at 21:55 for 20 episodes.

    Plot

    Byun Ji-sook is working as a sales clerk at a department store when she suddenly comes across her doppelgänger Seo Eun-ha. Whereas Ji-sook's family is hounded by loan sharks because of her father and brother's crippling debt, Eun-ha is the daughter of a congressman and fiancée of chaebol heir Choi Min-woo. Min-woo is the illegitimate son of the chairman of SJ Group and the company's presumptive heir, to the bitter resentment of the chairman's wife and her daughter, Min-woo's half-sister Mi-yeon. Despite his wealthy background, Min-woo had grown up without the love and warmth of family and friends, and his and Eun-ha's future marriage is understood by both parties to be a mutually beneficial business arrangement. He also doesn't know that the man Eun-ha is having an affair with is Mi-yeon's husband, the manipulative and ambitious Min Seok-hoon. Seok-hoon will stop at nothing to prevent his brother-in-law from being named successor, including conspiring with the latter's psychiatrist into gaslighting Min-woo and making him think he's going insane. But his plans go awry when Eun-ha ends up dead, so Seok-hoon threatens and blackmails Ji-sook into taking Eun-ha's place. As Min-woo begins to live in close quarters with Ji-sook, he is puzzled and intrigued by his new wife and how different she is from what he expected.

    Driving

    Driving most often refers to the controlled operation and movement of a motorized vehicle, such as a car, truck, or bus.

    Etymology

    The origin of the term driver, as recorded from the 15th century, refers to the occupation of driving working animals, especially pack horses or draft horses. The verb ' to drive ' in origin means "to force to move, to impel by physical force". It is first recorded of electric railway drivers in 1889 and of a motor-car driver in 1896. Early alternatives were motorneer,motor-man, motor-driver or motorist. French favors "conducteur" (the English equivalent, "conductor", being used —from the 1830s— not of the driver but of the person in charge of passengers and collecting fares), while German influenced areas adopted Fahrer (used of coach-drivers in the 18th century, but shortened about 1900 from the compound Kraftwagenfahrer), and the verbs führen, lenken, steuern —all with a meaning "steer, guide, navigate"— translating to conduire.

    Introduction of the automobile

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    Driving Home

    by: Hot Water Music

    i know the sink and the rot got feeling "is this happening to me" and i know what it's like to want to end it all driving home between the lines in the road i swear that i've been through this before when nothing makes much sense except for doing yourself in razor blades are hard to hold when we're hit in the heart with problems that won't shift it's hard to admit that we're afraid when we're hit in the head with unanswered questions that repeat "how could i ever live after this day" we can take the hits and grow tougher collect ourselves to live longer and find there is no need to be afraid because we all have more to offer when we struggle to cope with whatever it takes to make the says we all have what it takes to make it home




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