"End of the Line" is the last track from the Traveling Wilburys' first album, Volume 1, released in 1989. Its riding-on-the-rails rhythm suggests its theme and the on-the-move nature of the group. It features all the Wilburys, except Bob Dylan, as lead singers; George Harrison, Jeff Lynne, and Roy Orbison sing the choruses in turn, while Tom Petty sings the verses. The song then expands into a "freight train" rhythm to underscore its theme.
It was released as the second single from the album, eventually peaking at number 63 in the U.S. on the Billboard Hot 100 chart.
The music video for "End of the Line" was filmed after Roy Orbison's death in December 1988. To honor the loss, a shot of a guitar sitting in a rocking chair next to a photo of Orbison was used when Orbison's vocals are heard.
The song was used over the end credits of the final episode of the British sitcom One Foot in the Grave and the American comedy, Parks and Recreation.
"End of the Line" appeared in the George Harrison-produced cult comedy, Checking Out.
End of the Line or The End of the Line may refer to:
"End of the Line" is a song by British girl group Honeyz. It was released as the group's second single. It was released on 11 May 1998 and reached the top five of the UK Singles Chart in December 1998. It also got to number one on the UK R&B Chart, and was their longest charting single, spending 14 weeks in the Top 75. The single has sold 360,000 copies in the UK alone.
Composed by Australian songwriter Paul Begaud, the song was also recorded by Malaysian group JELITA and in Malay was translated to "Cinta di Akhir Garisan" (Love at the End of the Line)[1] sung by Malaysian Ziana Zain, Ning Baizura and Nora; and Indonesian Dessy Fitri.
On March 27, 2015 OfficialCharts.com inducted "End Of The Line" into their Pop Gem Hall Of Fame which celebrates "overlooked classics and huge hits of yesteryear". The song was chosen as the Ultimate Goodbye Song. Other songs that made the top 10 list included Beyonce's "Irreplaceable", N-Sync's "Bye, Bye, Bye" and Mariah Carey's "Always Be My Baby".
The 50-episode anime series Digimon Frontier, produced by Toei Animation in 2002, is the fourth series in the Digimon franchise. It does not follow the plot of any of its three predecessors, Digimon Adventure and Digimon Adventure 02 or Digimon Tamers. Instead, the story features five children who are prompted by unusual phone messages to go to a subway station and take a train to the Digital World. After two secondary characters, Bokomon and Neemon, reveal that the Digital World is in danger, the children gain the power to transform into Digimon in order to stop the forces seeking to destroy the Digital World. The series was directed by Yukio Kaikawa and written by Sukehiro Tomita and Akatsuki Yamatoya, featuring music by Takanori Arisawa.
The season aired 50 episodes on Fuji TV in Japan from April 7, 2002 to March 30, 2003. Unlike the previous three series, Digimon Frontier aired on UPN in the United States, beginning on September 9, 2002 to July 14, 2003, and later re-aired on ABC Family Channel. In Canada, the series aired on YTV. The series was also scheduled to air in the United Kingdom on Fox Kids UK, though the scheduling plans were eventually cancelled and never aired on the programming block, being instead taken over by Transformers Armada. On 27 February 2007, this series of Digimon was first aired in Australia on Toasted TV despite that it was already shown on Cheez TV in 2003. The Latino American version was first aired from March to June 2003 on weekdays at 8:30 p.m. (-4 GMT) on Fox Kids. The first four episodes were aired on Sunday during the Digimon Tamers marathon.