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"The 'In' Crowd" is a 1964 [2] song written by Billy Page [2] and arranged by his brother Gene and originally performed by Dobie Gray on his album Dobie Gray Sings for "In" Crowders That Go "Go-Go". It appeared on an episode of Dick Clark's Rock, Roll & Remember , featuring in the last week of November 1964, the month Gray's rendition was released.
Sabrina Carpenter has had quite a year! The former Disney star topped the charts with her pop hits, opened for Taylor Swift on the international Eras tour and performed on New Year’s Rockin’ Eve.
"Safe" was written during Sage's senior year of high school after the mass shooting in a high school in Parkland, Florida. He played the first version of the song for his sister, Kesha, who instantly felt the power of the track and wanted to help the cause by lending her voice to the song and movement.
"Safe Word" is a song by American recording artist Brooke Candy, released as a digital-only single on February 22, 2024. It was released as the lead single from her sophomore studio album Candyland (2024) and her twenty-eighth single overall.
"Safe" is the first single by American Christian and gospel singer Phil Wickham from his third studio album Heaven & Earth, which features MercyMe’s frontman Bart Millard. The single has made it into the top 20 on Billboard’s Christian AC and Soft AC/Inspirational charts and reached #4 on the Billboard's Christian songs chart on January 3.
The track conveys messages of "love, safety and stability". [4] Logan Potter of Euphoria Magazine felt that its lyrics conveys a message of "openness and comfort, admitting to putting up walls as a means of self-protection with words like." [5] The song is written in the key of B major, with a tempo of 100 beats per minute. [6]
"Safe and Sound" received positive reviews from critics. They often praised the song's disco-like structure and sound.Ryan Reed of Rolling Stone called the song "a psychedelic disco epic built on finger snaps, synth-strings, spastic jazz-fusion synths and one of the fiercest slap-bass grooves since Patrice Rushen's 1982 classic 'Forget Me Nots'."
Cole's lyrics were largely inspired by the cocaine-addicted narrator of American author Jay McInerney's 1984 novel Bright Lights, Big City. [3] In a 1987 interview with Sounds , he revealed, "I actually thought that in 'My Bag' I'd recovered some of the reckless, careless writing that I used to do in things like ' Perfect Skin '.