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  1. You know I still get the shakes. When you get this near. You look like a still from Cecil B. DeMille. When I saw you waiting at my door. In the last days of the century. Leaning from your balcony. You say changes come so rapidly. You can feel them in the air. See that light come shining down.

  2. Fields of France. 2:56. Antarctica. 4:06. Ghostly Horses of the Plain. 2:28. King Of Portugal | Al Stewart | Last Days Of The Century | 1988 Enigma LP. 4:23. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 1988 CD release of "Last Days Of The Century" on Discogs.

  3. So. Peter Gabriel. Released. 1986 — Spain. Vinyl —. LP, Album. Explore the tracklist, credits, statistics, and more for Last Days Of The Century by Al Stewart. Compare versions and buy on Discogs.

  4. Continuing his corporate wanderings, 1988's "Last Days of the Century" found Al Stewart signed by Enigma Records. For a label known for it's roster of punk and metal bands (Poison, Red Hot Chilli Peppers, The Smithereens, Stryper), Enigma was an odd choice to sign Stewart, but the label was on a commercial winning streak and was apparently willing to invest considerable time and capital on ...

  5. 5,0 de 5 estrellas Last Days Of The Century - Al Stewart. Revisado en Reino Unido el 23 de diciembre de 2010. Compra verificada. Going by the cover you'd expect a different tone of music to Al's normal run of the mill music but nothing has changed.

  6. 11 de feb. de 2014 · Last Days Of The Century Chords. Author Unregistered. Last edit on Feb 11, 2014. There is no strumming pattern for this song yet. Create and get +5 IQ. Intro Chords: Em D Bass notes: E - E - G - A - B - B - C - B - A - A - B - A - F# - F# - G - F# Em When the cock crows D/A Em And the wind blows D/A Em D/A And the primrose of dawn Em Is at your ...

  7. 29 de sept. de 1997 · Last Days Of The Century follows the metaphysical path that Al Stewart forged in 1973, with the release of Past Present And Future, that dealt with such topics as the prophesies of Nostradamus and the First World War. His lyrics show a conscious desire to translate literature into a musical form. "I'm more of a folk rock historian," notes Stewart.