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"Good Man" is a song by American recording artist Ne-Yo, released on February 6, 2018. [1] It was written by Ne-Yo along with Darhyl "DJ" Camper Jr. for his same-titled seventh studio album (2018), while production was helmed by the latter. The song contains a sample of "Untitled (How Does It Feel)" (2000) as performed by D'Angelo.
She usually plays with her guitar tuned down a whole step, though some songs on the record were played in this tuning with a capo. [7] The fifth track on the album, "If You Were Someone I Loved" deals with the opioid crisis. [15] Because her debut album was released during the COVID-19 pandemic, Goodman did not headline a tour for the album.
"A Good Man" is a song written by Victoria Shaw, Keith Follesé and Adrienne Follesé, and recorded by Canadian country music band Emerson Drive. It was released in March 2006 as the first single from their album Countrified. The song reached the Top 20 on the U.S. Billboard Hot Country Songs chart in 2006, peaking at number 17.
"Whatta Man" (also known as "Whatta Man (Good Man)") is a song recorded by South Korean girl group project I.O.I. The song samples the 1968 song " What a Man " by Linda Lyndell . The song was released as a single album by the first sub-unit of the group, with members Nayoung , Chungha , Kyulkyung , Sohye , Yoojung , Doyeon and Somi .
Good Man, a 2018 album by Ne-yo "Good Man" (song), a song on the album "Good Man", a 2002 song by India.Arie from Voyage to India "Good Man", a 2009 song by Heavy Trash from Midnight Soul Serenade
Morrissey and the Russian Sailor and Other Irish Songs (EP) Joe Heaney: 1960: The Good Man: Collector Records (UK) JEI 5 [18] Traditional Music of Beech Mountain 1: Hattie Presnell: 1961: Five Nights Drunk: Folk-Legacy FSA 22 The English and Scottish Popular Ballads: Vol. 1 – Child Ballads: Ewan MacColl: 1961: Oud Goodman (Our Gudeman, Child 274)
Megan Boni created an accidental earworm. On April 30, the 26-year-old New York-based TikToker sang a little ditty about searching for a wealthy, tall, blue-eyed Wall Street-type, then shared it ...
There are at least 150 recorded versions of the song. [6] The inversion of the phrase, as "A hard man is good to find", is generally attributed, though with some uncertainty, to Mae West, or possibly to Sophie Tucker. [3] [7] The song's title was used as the title of a 1953 short story by Flannery O'Connor.