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Eight miles high song
Eight miles high song





eight miles high song

which reached #12 on Cash Box and #14 on Billboard on May 14, 1966.

eight miles high song

So the final product is a product of an obsessed and probably by now deranged mind.

EIGHT MILES HIGH SONG PLUS

Sometimes the old ratio works best, plus digitally these days there is a bonus with 4:3, some slight magnification. Although I initially worked with the idea of converting to 16:9, I felt more satisfied with 4:3 ratio. Then I finally worked between two different color filters, one where I had to boost brightness, the other I had to dim. Eight miles high and when you touch down youll find that its stranger than known. My first three color experiments wiped those out completely, made for some interesting scenes here and there, but not consistently engaging to watch throughout the performance. Contains printable guitar tab plus an interactive, downloadable digital guitar tab file. Stream songs including 'Landing', 'Song of a Devils Servant' and more. Listen to Eight Miles High by Golden Earring on Apple Music. That one did not avoid any pretensions concerning "getting high." But concentrated viewings showed some very delicate images, ghost images if you will, that at times became material. Stream songs including 'Landing', 'Song of a Devils Servant' and more. Then I uncovered the original 1966 promo video, which I remembered seeing. Been there, done that would be the reaction. Unfortunately, I could not find much documentary footage of The Byrds on tour, oddly enough, except their second video of "Eight Miles High" where they play up the plane and tour story bit. That at least was the story although many have always thought it was about tripping on acid or getting high. I originally wanted to do use plane liftoffs and landings, mixed with documentary footage of the band on different tours, or at least one tour, as this is what the song is really about: their first tour, the plane trip, and the jet lag and surreal sense of things having changed. It eventually does become a fixed subject that is hard to shake free from. One of my favorite songs by The Byrds, and one I get rather obsessive about, tending to many repeat focused listenings.







Eight miles high song