begins with short piano riff as intro for 5 bars. Solo vocals join in bar 6 to commence verse 1. Bass Guitars and drum kit join in line 9, playing a riff. Backing vocals enter with harmonica playing improvisations in pauses between vocals. Pace and volume of the vocals and instruments build. Harmonica plays improvised solo as a bridge between verse 1 and the chorus. Synthesizer, drum kit and bass guitars play a backing melody in the harmonica solo. Chorus starts in line 14 as a crescendo from the build up. Harmonica plays improvisations in pauses between vocals. Chorus is repeated 6 times. Pace and volume decline to conclude the song with 5 beats played by all instruments.
3900 ft.
The siege of Khe Sanh .
One can find information about the Battle of Khe Sanh online via the 'History' website. The seventy seven siege took place in early 1968 and was one of the most deadliest in history.
Somewhere between the 8th of April and the 9th of July 1968
The Offical U.S. figures for casualties during the Battle, have 205 killed and 816 wounded. A more detailed assessment found 730 killed, 2,598 wounded, and 7 missing. Not sure how many of those were Marines. For more information about the siege of Khe Sanh see: http://www.answers.com/topic/siege-of-khe-sanh
Battle of Khe Sanh happened on 1968-01-21.
if you mean 'khe sanh' then cold chisel or more speciffically jimmy barnes (cold chisel frontman)
The Marines of Khe Sanh - 2015 was released on: USA: 21 January 2015
Australian band, Cold Chisel, released 'Khe Sanh' in 1978.
3900 ft.
The US Marines at Khe Sanh won because Khe Sanh did not fall to the NVA. At Khe Sanh, General Giap intended to repeat his success against the French Army at Dien Bien Phu fourteen years earlier, but the siege failed because the US managed to supply Khe Sanh by air and provide tactical air support for the defenders, whereas the French air link to Dien Bien Phu was tenuous at best after that siege began.
It was part of the Tet offensive of '68.
Khe Sanh, during the Vietnam War.
The siege of Khe Sanh .
One can find information about the Battle of Khe Sanh online via the 'History' website. The seventy seven siege took place in early 1968 and was one of the most deadliest in history.
War Stories with Oliver North - 2001 Siege at Khe Sanh 1-9 was released on: USA: 3 February 2002
Somewhere between the 8th of April and the 9th of July 1968