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"We've Got to Work It Out Between Us" was released as a single by Dot Records in January 1972 as a seven-inch vinyl record. It was backed on the B-side by the song "I Keep It Hid". [3] Record World found the song was receiving regular airplay at four US country radio stations and theorized that it might be "her first really big country record". [5]
[5] For "lickerish tooth," Loesser consulted a thesaurus to find synonyms for "covetous" and found "lecherous," which was "appalling in sound to the modern ear," after which he consulted Oxford English Dictionary and saw "two archaic spellings"—"licorice" and "lickerish"—and "[i]n the exemplary material ... found 'lickerish tooth.'" [5]
“I was starting to work for free at the time,” he says. ... In other words, what does a producer do? ... It’s not perfect.’ You have to be the one to say to them, ‘Hey, this is it. We ...
"Work It Out" is a song by American singer-songwriter Joe Jonas. It was released as the lead single from his upcoming second studio album, Music for People Who Believe in Love , on July 19, 2024. He released a remix of the song in collaboration with his band DNCE , as part of their short compilation playlist titled Music for People Who Believe ...
Nvidia shareholders just got some bad news from Broadcom. ... In other words, the company anticipates that custom AI chip sales will increase at least 70% annually in the next three years, but ...
"Work to Do" is a 1972 funk song by the Isley Brothers, released on their T-Neck imprint. The song, written and produced by the group, was issued on their 1972 album, Brother, Brother, Brother , and charted at #51 pop and #11 R&B upon its initial charting.
In other words, attention is the name of the game and these two are masters of it. ... It’s got a ’90s minimalism that appeals to us, but we really hate the random strings, as well as that ...
Griffin's first novel, Spare and Found Parts, is a dystopian science fiction work for young adults.It is set in the aftermath of a machine apocalypse called "the Turn", in "Black Water City", a remnant of Dublin, so named from one of the two Irish-language names for the city, derived from the River Poddle.