Echo The Bunnymen The Killing Moon

Echo The Bunnymen The Killing Moon. Echo & The Bunnymen The Killing Moon (Vinyl, 7", Single, 45 RPM) Discogs If the title doesn't sound familiar, we guarantee you've heard the track before. Ian McCulloch has said: "When I sing 'The Killing Moon', I know there isn't a.

The Killing Moon Echo and the Bunnymen YouTube
The Killing Moon Echo and the Bunnymen YouTube from www.youtube.com

With Pete DeFreitas, Echo & The Bunnymen, Ian McCulloch, Les Pattinson The Killing Moon Lyrics & Meanings: Under blue moon I saw you / So soon you'll take me / Up in your arms, too late to beg you / Or cancel it though I know it must be / The killing time / Unwillingly mine / / Fate up against your will / Through the thick and thin / He will wait until / You give yourself to him / / In starlit nights I saw you / So cruelly you kissed me / Your lips a magic world.

The Killing Moon Echo and the Bunnymen YouTube

With Pete DeFreitas, Echo & The Bunnymen, Ian McCulloch, Les Pattinson "The Killing Moon" is a song by the English rock band Echo & the Bunnymen The Killing Moon Lyrics & Meanings: Under blue moon I saw you / So soon you'll take me / Up in your arms, too late to beg you / Or cancel it though I know it must be / The killing time / Unwillingly mine / / Fate up against your will / Through the thick and thin / He will wait until / You give yourself to him / / In starlit nights I saw you / So cruelly you kissed me / Your lips a magic world.

The Story Behind The Song Echo & The Bunnymen’s postpunk masterclass ‘The Killing Moon’ Far. Unlike 80s contemporaries U2 or Simple Minds, whose blustery stadium rock seemed ready made for the US market, the Bunnymen were much more ambiguous Provided to YouTube by Rhino/Warner RecordsThe Killing Moon · Echo And The BunnymenOcean Rain℗ 1984 Warner Music UK LtdOrchestral Arranger: Adam PetersCello.

ECHO & THE BUNNYMEN THE KILLING MOON (1984). If the title doesn't sound familiar, we guarantee you've heard the track before. It is one of the band's highest-charting hits, reaching number 9 in the UK Singles Chart, and often cited as the band's greatest song