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In December 2017, Eilish premiered a Spotify-released vertical video to accompany the song. [22] It was eventually released on YouTube on January 4, 2018. [ 23 ] In the minimalistic visual, it portrays a silver-haired Eilish in an all-white room talking to her reflection in a mirror about how she hates herself. [ 22 ]
"If Teardrops Were Silver" was released as a single by Capitol Records in June 1966. It was distributed by the label as a seven-inch vinyl single. On its B-side was the song "Outstanding in Your Field". [4] It received positive reception from Cash Box magazine who called the song "very pretty" and "bittersweet". [3]
"Teardrops on My Guitar" is a song by the American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift, who wrote it with Liz Rose. In the US, Big Machine Records released the track to country radio on February 20 and pop radio on November 9, 2007, making it the second single from Swift's debut studio album, Taylor Swift (2006).
Love and Music is the tenth collaborative studio album by Porter Wagoner and Dolly Parton.It was released on July 2, 1973, by RCA Victor.It contains their top ten country single "If Teardrops Were Pennies".
The 'One Tree Hill' star tells PEOPLE that he and Taylor Swift's family stayed close for years after he appeared as Drew in the music video
Herbert Paul Gilley (October 1, 1929 – June 16, 1957) was an American country music lyricist and promoter from Kentucky. In his lifetime, he was little known as a songwriter, but decades after his death by drowning at age 27, he was identified more widely as likely having written the lyrics to a dozen famous songs, including two that were hits for Hank Williams: "Cold, Cold Heart" and "I'm ...
“I had some help / It ain’t like I can make this kind of mess all by myself / Don’t act like you ain’t help me pull that bottle off the shelf,” Wallen, 30, a Morgan Wallen and Post ...
Tony Bennett recorded the song in 1954. Anita Carter released a version of the song in 1954. Joni James recorded the song in 1957. George Jones cut a version for his 1960 Mercury album George Jones Salutes Hank Williams. Adam Wade charted with the song in 1962. The song appears on Hank Williams, Jr.'s 1964 LP Sings the Songs of Hank Williams.