Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Lights, Music, Camera Action" "Life Got Cold" cassette/European CD 2003 "Live in the Country" Out of Control: 2008 "Long Hot Summer" Chemistry: 2005 "Love Bomb" Sound of the Underground: 2002 "Love Machine" What Will The Neighbours Say? 2004 "Love/Hate" Sound of the Underground: 2003 "Love Is the Key" Out of Control: 2008 "Love is Pain" Out of ...
"Different for Girls" is a song written by Shane McAnally and J. T. Harding and recorded by American country music artist Dierks Bentley featuring American singer-songwriter Elle King as a duet. It was released to country radio on June 6, 2016 as the second single from Bentley's eighth studio album Black (2016). [ 1 ]
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
Marina and the Diamonds' cover of Justin Bieber's "Boyfriend" (2012) is an answer song to the original tune, the lyrics adapted to give it a female perspective. [36] Lecrae made the song "No Regrets" (2012) in response to "The Motto" (2011) by Drake. [37] Which itself is a response to "If Today Was Your Last Day" (2008) by Nickelback.
"Free Woman" is a song by American singer and songwriter Lady Gaga recorded for her sixth studio album Chromatica (2020). Gaga co-wrote it with the song's producers BloodPop, Axwell and Johannes Klahr. "Free Woman" was released as the album's fifth track, several weeks after a high-quality demo version of the song was leaked onto the Internet.
"Wine, Women an' Song" is the name of the fifth song on Come an' Get It by Whitesnake; The Bee Gees' song "Wine and Women" starts with the sentence "wine and women and song will only make me sad". It was released as a single in 1965 in Australia and was their first top 20 on the local charts and ever in their career.
The following is a list of songs about cities. It is not exhaustive. Cities are a major topic for popular songs. [1] [2] Music journalist Nick Coleman said that apart from love, "pop is better on cities than anything else." [1] Popular music often treats cities positively, though sometimes they are portrayed as places of danger and temptation.
"Rainy Day Women #12 & 35" (sometimes referred to erroneously as "Everybody Must Get Stoned") [1] is a song written and recorded by the American singer-songwriter Bob Dylan. Columbia Records first released an edited version as a single in March 1966, which reached numbers two and seven in the US and UK charts respectively.