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“Este’s been losing sleep,” Swift croons on the track from 2020’s Evermore, a song featuring the band HAIM. “Her husband’s acting different and it smells like infidelity.”
The song originated when Bacharach and David were asked to write a song with the title "Wives and Lovers", on the theme of marital infidelity, as a promotional tie-in for the 1963 film Wives and Lovers. The song did not appear in the film but was intended simply to promote the film, making it what was known at the time as an "exploitation song".
Stephen Barker, Taylor Swift. Getty Images (2) Stephen Barker Liles is living proof that not all of Taylor Swift’s songs are about heartbreak. The Love and Theft singer, 39, took a trip down ...
I Hate U (Prince song) I Heard It Through the Grapevine; I Hope (Gabby Barrett song) (I Know) I'm Losing You; I Know What You Did Last Summer (song) I Like It (Enrique Iglesias song) I Saw the Light (Wynonna Judd song) I Should Have Cheated; I Wish (Carl Thomas song) I Wish It Would Rain; I Write Sins Not Tragedies; I'm Not the Only One; I've ...
"Been Caught Stealing" is a song by American rock band Jane's Addiction, released in November 1990 by Warner Bros. as the third single from the band's second album, Ritual de lo Habitual (1990). The song is also the band's biggest hit, spending four weeks at No. 1 on the US Billboard Modern Rock chart. [ 3 ]
Loud Women, a non-profit organization, released the song as part of protests against the death of Sarah Everard. 2021: Samanta Tīna "The Moon Is Rising" Tīna performed the song for the Eurovision Song Contest 2021, representing Latvia. The song describes women taking control of their lives. [57] 2021: Yola "Stand for Myself" Stand for Myself
All boy moms and boy dads can agree that having a son is quite the life-changing experience—an experience that can be best described in heartfelt country songs.Yes, there are country songs out ...
The song opens with the line: I've been working on a cocktail, called grounds for divorce. Uncut magazine said it was "surely one of the best opening lines of any pop song in years" [1] and NME compared it to something James Bond might say "this is kind of glorious one-liner he’d mutter before taking the bad guys down and then smooching a lofty Eastern European countess."