The song "Will You Go Lassie, Go" (Wild Mountain Thyme) is sometimes mistakenly credited as a traditional song, but was in fact written by William McPeake, and first recorded by Francis McPeake (and is credited on the album to F. McPeak).
The Thin Lizzy Album Black Rose: A Rock Legend references Róisín Dubh in both title and the final track.
Black Sea | Black Forest | Black Sabbath | Rose | Rose Bowl Game | Rose Bowl | The Black Eyed Peas | Pete Rose | black | Black | Black Death | The Black Keys | black metal | black-and-white | rose | Jack Black | Cilla Black | Creature from the Black Lagoon | Ladysmith Black Mambazo | black comedy | Axl Rose | The Name of the Rose | The Black Crowes | Charlie Rose | Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl | Men in Black | Black Canary | Black people | Black Label Society | Black Hills |
This title should not to be confused with Williams Pinball Classics (2001) by Encore, Inc. that features four tables (Creature from the Black Lagoon, Tales of the Arabian Nights, Black Rose and Lost World) for Windows.
These shops include Black Rose, which caters for goths, with items such as coffin-shaped handbags, and Cyberdog, which houses much cyber-style "neon" PVC and rubber clothing.
In the 1980s, Hellhammer, Venom, Death SS and King Diamond of Mercyful Fate (who used corpse paint as early as 1978 in his band Black Rose) were the first extreme metal groups to use corpse paint.
His most popular novel was The Black Rose (1945), centred in the time and actions of Bayan of the Baarin also known as Bayan of the Hundred Eyes.