As a contemporary example, Sainte-Marie mentions how the Treaty of Canandaigua was broken through the building of the Kinzua Dam.
Buffalo, New York | Buffalo | Buffalo Bills | University at Buffalo, The State University of New York | Buffalo Bill | buffalo | Buffalo Bisons | Buffalo Sabres | University at Buffalo | Donna the Buffalo | Buffalo Springfield | Buffalo Niagara International Airport | Buffalo Soldier | Buffalo River | African buffalo | Buffalo Tom | Buffalo River (Tennessee) | Buffalo Creek | Buffalo City Hall | American Buffalo | The Buffalo News | Terry Buffalo Ware | Terry "Buffalo" Ware | Silver Buffalo Award | Roman Catholic Diocese of Buffalo | Grant Lee Buffalo | Buffalo, Wyoming | Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra | Buffalo Bulls | Buffalo Bill Historical Center |
"All the Money's Gone" is a single by Babylon Zoo and the first to be taken from the second album "King Kong Groover".
The song was written by Ben Harper together with Jason Mozersky and released as the second single from the album Give Till It's Gone.
Highlights from the album included the first single, "Secret Love", an up-tempo ballad, which was a top five hit in the UK, "When He's Gone", a heavier pop song, issued as the album's second single, it features the Alan Kendall's guitar solo ending on that song, and the sentimental ballad "The Only Love", released as the third and final single from the album.
It is most noted for its performance in a 1933 movie, She Done Him Wrong, in which Mae West sang it in a suggestive manner.
It is most famous for two widely covered folk standards, "Universal Soldier" and "Cod'ine", as well as "Now That the Buffalo's Gone", a lament about the continued confiscation of Indian lands, as evidenced by the building of the Kinzua Dam in about 1964.
Keenan plays guitar and sings a part of the second verse on Metallica's cover of the Lynyrd Skynyrd song "Tuesday's Gone".
Rossington asked Medlocke if he remembered how to play "Free Bird", "Tuesday's Gone", and "Workin' For MCA", among others.
The band's national exposure began in 1973 with the release of their debut album, (Pronounced 'Lĕh-'nérd 'Skin-'nérd), which has a string of hits and fan favorites including: "I Ain't the One", "Tuesday's Gone", "Gimme Three Steps", "Simple Man," and their signature song, "Free Bird", which he later dedicated to the late Duane Allman of The Allman Brothers Band.
American actor Brian J. White and actress Malinda Williams star in the clip, which centers on two characters having words in their automobile, leading to a devastating accident.
"Tuesday's Gone" is a Lynyrd Skynyrd cover which later appeared on the 1994 compilation Skynyrd Frynds.
began performing as a duo eventually recording "Yesterday's Gone" in July 1963 in a session at Abbey Road Studios