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The list of songs that follows include songs that deal with schooling as a primary subject as well as those that make significant use of schools, classrooms, students or teachers as imagery, or are used in school-related activities. The songs are examples of the types of themes and issues addressed by such songs.
The song reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100 for the week beginning 5 July 1986, where it remained for one week, becoming the 600th different song [citation needed] to ascend to that position. It also topped the adult contemporary and R&B charts in the United States that same summer.
"Burn Out" is a song recorded by American country music band Midland. It is the third single from their 2017 debut album On the Rocks.The band's three members, Mark Wystrach, Cameron Duddy, and Jess Carson, co-wrote the song with Shane McAnally and Josh Osborne, the latter two of whom co-produced it with Dann Huff.
These songs represent making room for more good in your life, making that choice because a lot of time when we lose things, we gain things too." If you need me, I'll be listening to these on repeat.
The work features songs and monologues inspired by the NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt and Edgar Lee Masters' Spoon River Anthology. Each of the monologues is written from the perspective of characters who've died from AIDS and the songs represent the feelings of friends and family members dealing with the loss.
Midnights. Swift’s 2022 album, Midnights, features perhaps the most amount of songs that are not about dating.From “You’re on Your Own, Kid,” and “Karma” to “Dear Reader ...
"Be Alright" is a song by Australian singer and songwriter Dean Lewis. The song was released in June 2018 as the lead single from Lewis' debut studio album, A Place We Knew . [ 1 ] It reached number one and is certified 10× Platinum in Australia and multi platinum worldwide, including 5× Platinum in the United States.
The song centers on the plight of a teenage girl in high school. Her girlfriends only "care about what she wears" and the narrator assures her "there's life after high school." The lyrics suggest she is wiser than her years and, in fact, is receiving an education to the behavior of adults in high school. [2]