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The song was the title track of a 1971 album, Reconsider Me, by John Wesley Ryles, and as a single it hit No.39 on the country charts. In 2009, Louisiana bluesman Bryan Lee covered it on his album My Lady Don't Love My Lady. Jimmy Barnes included it on his 2009 album The Rhythm and the Blues.
In 1984, Zevon presented "Reconsider Me" to Jimmy Iovine.Iovine gave the song to Stevie Nicks and it was recorded for her 1984 album Mirror, Mirror.The album was pulled from release, and the song was left unreleased until 1998 when Nicks released her box set, Enchanted [4] Nicks said in the Enchanted box set, "Jimmy Iovine brought me this song, I think Jimmy and I were fighting, and for some ...
Reconsider Me: The Love Songs is a posthumous compilation album by American singer/songwriter Warren Zevon, released in 2006. It is the first album to be released after his death in 2003. It is the first album to be released after his death in 2003.
The song, along with "Ask Me", was later included on the 1968 compilation album Elvis' Gold Records Volume 4, and an alternate take with a faster tempo was released in 1985 on the compilation album Reconsider Baby.
Its follow-up, "Reconsider Me", a country song produced by Singleton, became his biggest hit, reaching number 8 on the R&B chart and number 28 on the pop chart in 1969. Two more singles, "I Can't Be All Bad" and "I Won't Cry" (a reissue of the Ric recording), were lesser hits later the same year, and the label released an album, Heart and Soul .
Instrumental rock is rock music that emphasizes musical instruments and features very little or no singing. An instrumental is a musical composition or recording without lyrics , or singing , although it might include some inarticulate vocals , such as shouted backup vocals in a big band setting.
"Thanks" was released as a single by MCA Records in August 1975. [4] The song spent 11 weeks on the Billboard Hot Country Singles before reaching number 24 in October 1975. [5] In Canada, the single reached number 19 on the RPM Country Songs chart in 1975.. [6] It was released on his 1976 studio album, Peanuts and Diamonds and Other Jewels. [3]
The term "PowerPoint karaoke" is also sometimes derisively used to refer to presenters who face the screen where their PowerPoint slides are being projected and proceed to read them, boring and effectively ignoring their audience. Spanish conceptual artist Rubén Grilo used "PowerPoint Karaoke" as a title for a show at MARCO in June 2011.