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The Intro begins in E Flat Minor, with the verses beginning in the key of G Flat major, changing to G major and again to A Flat major throughout the song, with the Chorus ending in F Minor, with an A Flat Major chord in the guitar. Walter Scott's vocals range from Eb3 to C5. On the B-side is a song titled "Try Me Baby."
C. Cardboard Box (song) Careless Whisper; The Carroll County Accident; Caught Out There; Cell Block Tango; Cheater, Cheater; Cheatin' (song) Cheatin' on Me; Cheating (song) The Chill of an Early Fall; Confessions Part II; Contagious (song) Cookie Jar (Gym Class Heroes song) Creep (TLC song) Creepin' (Metro Boomin, the Weeknd and 21 Savage song)
A great Taylor song, made all the better by that Eras Tour performance—“don’t call me kid” hive rise up—“Illicit Affairs” comes from the artist’s 2020 album Folklore and follows ...
In contrast to most other songs of that era, the verses consist mainly of minor chords, while the instrumental break shifts to a rather conventional major chords structure [citation needed]. It served as the title song to John Boorman's well-regarded 1965 DC5 vehicle and pop scene film Catch Us If You Can (retitled Having a Wild Weekend in the ...
From Taylor Swift to Carrie Underwood, ever major songwriter has written a song about cheating.
She croons, “And your cheating husband disappeared, well / No one asks any questions here,” in the song’s second verse. Every Song About Matty Healy on Taylor Swift’s ‘The Tortured Poets ...
"Call Out My Name" is a song by the Canadian singer-songwriter the Weeknd from his debut extended play, My Dear Melancholy (2018). The song was co-written by the Weeknd and producer Frank Dukes, with musician Nicolas Jaar receiving writing credits for the sampling of his 2016 song "Killing Time".
The Joey + Rory version of "Cheater, Cheater" debuted at #57 on the U.S. Billboard Hot Country Songs chart for the chart week of September 27, 2008, and entered the Top 40 in its eighth week. The song peaked at #30 in January 2009, spending 20 weeks on the chart. [6] The song has sold 367,000 copies in the US as of March 2016. [7]