Lyrics by Wye Oak

Find here the lyrics to your favorite songs by Wye Oak.

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  1. Civilian
  2. Dance My Pain Away (District 78 remix)
  3. A Lawn To Mow
  4. Archaic Smile
  5. Before
  6. Dance My Pain Away
  7. Despicable Animal
  8. Dog's Eye
  9. Doubt
  10. Emmylou
  11. Family Glue
  12. Fish
  13. For Prayer
  14. Glory
  15. Holy Holy
  16. Hot As Day
  17. I Don't Feel Young
  18. I Hope You Die
  19. I Know It's Real
  20. I Know The Law
  21. I Want For Nothing
  22. If Children Were Wishes
  23. It Was Not Natural
  24. Join
  25. Keeping Company
  26. Lifer
  27. Mary Is Mary
  28. Milk And Honey
  29. My Creator
  30. Orchard Fair
  31. Over and Over
  32. Paradise
  33. Plains
  34. Please Concrete
  35. Prodigy
  36. Regret
  37. Say Hello
  38. Shriek
  39. Siamese
  40. Sick Talk
  41. Sight, Flight
  42. Symmetry
  43. Take It In
  44. Talking About Money
  45. Tattoo
  46. That I Do
  47. The Altar
  48. The Instrument
  49. The Tower
  50. Two Small Deaths
  51. We Were Wealth

The Wye Oak was the largest white oak tree in the United States and the State Tree of Maryland from 1941 until its demise in 2002. Wye Oak State Park preserves the site where the revered tree stood for more than 400 years in the town of Wye Mills, Talbot County, Maryland. The Wye Oak was believed to be over 460 years old at the time of its destruction during a severe thunderstorm on June 6, 2002. It measured 31 feet 10 inches (970 cm) in circumference of the trunk at breast height, 96 feet (29 m) high, with a crown spread of 119 feet (36 m). It is believed that the acorn that became the oak germinated around 1540. Its largest limb, estimated to weigh 35 short tons (31.5 tonnes) and six feet (1.8 meters) thick, fell earlier, on June 10, 1984. The Wye Oak was still bearing a maturing crop of acorns when it was toppled. The Wye Oak drew public attention in 1909, when Maryland State Forester Fred W. Besley made the first official measurement of the tree. Ten years later, in 1919, it was featured in American Forestry magazine as the first tree in the American Forestry Association's "Tree Hall of Fame." The Wye Oak inspired Besley to found the Big Tree Champion Program in 1925; as a result, in 1940 the American Forestry Association named the Wye Oak one of its first National Champion Trees. By the time of its destruction 62 years later, only one other tree named that year remained standing. The tree faced a loss of a large limb in 1956 that sparked concerns, and another limb fell in 1984 that weighed 70,280 lb (31,880 kg). The tree fell during a heavy thunderstorm with high winds on the night of June 6, 2002. The tree's exceptionally long life has been attributed to the efforts of park managers, who applied preventive measures such as fertilizer and insecticide as well as extensive pruning, cabling, and bracing of the branches.

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