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"Girls & Boys" is a song by English Britpop band Blur, released in March 1994 by Food Records as the lead single from the group's third studio album, Parklife (1994). The frontman of Blur, Damon Albarn wrote the song's lyrics with bandmembers Graham Coxon , Alex James and Dave Rowntree , while Stephen Street produced it.
Girls & Boys or Girls and Boys may refer to: Girls & Boys, 2018 play by British playwright Dennis Kelly; Girls and Boys, an album by Ingrid Michaelson from 2006 "Girls & Boys" (Prince song), a Prince song from 1986 "Girls & Boys" (Blur song), a Blur song from 1994 "Girls & Boys" (Good Charlotte song), a Good Charlotte song from 2003
Parklife is the third studio album by the English rock band Blur, released on 25 April 1994, by Food Records.After moderate sales for their previous album Modern Life Is Rubbish (1993), Parklife returned Blur to prominence in the UK, helped by its four hit singles: "Girls & Boys", "To the End", the title track and "End of a Century".
Before the Britpop revolution fully took hold, Blur was just another band of underdogs aiming to marry insightful cultural commentary with music that was just as stylistically diverse. That all ...
The album was released on 26 August 1991 in the United Kingdom by record label Food.It was released in the US a month later with a different track listing: this version is frontloaded with Blur's three UK singles, and the song "Sing" was replaced by "I Know", previously an A-side with "She's So High" (see track listings for exact changes).
The votes are in. Last month, on Nov. 14, Oxford University Press narrowed a list down to six words and the world had the opportunity to vote for its favorite. Language experts from the publishing ...
Country. Average annual hours worked in 2006. Percentage decrease since 1980. United States. 1804. 0.8. Canada. 1766. 2.3. Japan. 1784. 15.9. South Korea. 2305. 19.9
"Stereotypes" is a song by English alternative rock band Blur and is the opening track to their fourth studio album, The Great Escape (1995). It was released on 12 February 1996 as the third single from that album, charting at number seven on the UK Singles Chart.