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The song is the lowest-charting of Winehouse's Back to Black singles, peaking at number 33 on the UK Singles Chart and spending four weeks on the UK Top 100 (46-61-{33}-64). Winehouse performed "Love Is a Losing Game" live when she appeared at the 2007 Mercury Prize. [3] She later performed it at the 2008 BRIT Awards. The song won the award for ...
"Arcade" is a song by Dutch singer-songwriter Duncan Laurence written and composed by Laurence, Joel Sjöö, Wouter Hardy, and Will Knox. The song was released on 7 March 2019 by Spark Records. [1] It was later included as the lead single on his debut studio album Small Town Boy, and also features on his debut EP Worlds on Fire. [2] [3]
Duncan de Moor (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈdʏŋkə(n) də ˈmoːr]; born 11 April 1994), [2] known professionally as Duncan Laurence, is a Dutch singer and songwriter.He represented the Netherlands in the Eurovision Song Contest 2019 with his song "Arcade" and went on to win the competition, giving the Netherlands its first Eurovision win since 1975.
In “You’re Losing Me,” Swift sings she’s like a “phoenix always rising from the ashes, mending all her gashes,” which definitely sounds like post-breakup rhetoric.
The album's first single "Loving You – Losing You" entered the Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs in the week dated April 9th, 1977 and peaked at no. 32 nearly two months later, spending a total of twelve weeks on the chart. [9]
The song was recorded at a blistering speed and contains tongue twisting lyrics about a country boy for whom nothing ever goes right. The song would reach #7 on the charts. [ 1 ] In the liner notes to the 1982 Jones compilation Anniversary – 10 Years of Hits , producer Billy Sherrill writes that Jones rarely performed the song live because he ...
UPDATED: Sad songs say so much, as the man said. And in the case of a brand new Taylor Swift song, “You’re Losing Me,” some of her fans believe the lyrics say plenty about her relationship ...
"Can't Get Used to Losing You" is a song written by Jerome "Doc" Pomus and Mort Shuman, first made popular by Andy Williams in a 1963 record release, which was a number-two hit in both the US and the UK. Twenty years later, British band The Beat took a reggae re-arran