Crossword clues for yesterdays
yesterdays
Wiktionary
n. (plural of yesterday English)
Wikipedia
Yesterdays is a 1975 compilation album by the British progressive rock band Yes. Released as the band were about to explore their own solo projects, it consists mostly of material from their first two albums, Yes and Time and a Word. In addition, it features the b-side "Dear Father" and their cover of Simon & Garfunkel's " America" which was featured on an Atlantic Records sampler album in 1972 called The New Age of Atlantic. An edit of this extended recording was also released as a US single that year.
All of the tracks on this album feature Yes’s original line-up with Peter Banks and Tony Kaye except "America," which includes Steve Howe and Rick Wakeman.
This was the last Yes album until Drama to use cover artwork by Roger Dean. The front cover incorporates imagery from the cover of Time and a Word, while the back cover was designed to be used as an alternate front cover.
The inner sleeve has photographs of all band members past and present, except then-current keyboardist Patrick Moraz, but including Alan White, who does not play on any of the tracks.
"Yesterdays" is a power ballad and the third track on the Guns N' Roses album Use Your Illusion II. It was written by Axl Rose, West Arkeen, Del James and Billy McCloud. This song is featured in the 2004 compilation Greatest Hits, and the Vegas version below was included on the album Live Era '87–'93. The song peaked at #72 on the Billboard Hot 100.
"Yesterdays" is a 1933 song composed by Jerome Kern, with lyrics by Otto Harbach.
It was written for the show Roberta (1933), where it was introduced by Fay Templeton. The song was soon picked up by jazz musicians and has since gone on to become one of the top jazz standards. JazzStandards.com (see "External links" below) ranks it ninth among all jazz standards, in terms of being "included most often on currently issued CDs by the greatest number of jazz artists."
Irene Dunne performed the song in the film version Roberta (1935).
Barbra Streisand performed the song in her TV special Color Me Barbra and included a recording on her album Color Me Barbra ( 1966).
Yesterdays is a Hungarian symphonic progressive rock band based in Cluj Napoca, Romania.
Its musical style has been compared by various reviewers to Yes 1, Quidam 2, Pat Metheny3, Anna Maria Jopek 4, Eclipse (from Brazil) 5 and Genesis
Yesterdays is a live jazz album by Keith Jarrett's everlasting-trio-formula: Jarrett-Peacock-DeJohnette, recorded from the concert performance on April 30, 2001 at the Metropolitan Festival Hall, Tokyo and from the sound-check recording on April 24, 2001 at the Orchard Hall, Tokyo.
Yesterdays is the eleventh studio album by the punk rock band Pennywise, which was released on July 15, 2014. Although Pennywise considers Yesterdays to be a proper studio album, it contains previously unrecorded compositions (with the exception of "No Way Out" and "Slowdown", which appeared on 1989's A Word from the Wise and 1993's Unknown Road respectively) by their late bassist Jason Thirsk. Yesterdays is also Pennywise's first album with singer Jim Lindberg since his departure in 2009.
Yesterdays is an album by Argentinian jazz composer and saxophonist Gato Barbieri featuring performances recorded in New York in 1974 and first released on the Flying Dutchman label. The album was rereleased in 1988 as The Third World Revisited with two additional tracks from El Pampero.
Usage examples of "yesterdays".
Life had taught her that tomorrow would come soon enough, and with it all the regrets for yesterdays that were forever beyond her reach—her dead mother, her gentle and helpless father, the offhanded cruelty of life to the very children who were least able to defend themselves.