Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Paper Planes" is a song by British recording artist M.I.A. released on 11 February ... where he altered the original lyric to "All MPs wanna do is take your money", ...
"Take the Money and Run" is a song recorded in 1976 by the Steve Miller Band. A song about two young (possibly teenage) bandits and the detective pursuing them, it was one of the many hit singles produced by the Steve Miller Band in the 1970s and featured on the 1976 album Fly Like an Eagle.
"Take the Money and Run", by Crosby & Nash from Wind on the Water, 1975 "Take the Money and Run" (Steve Miller Band song) , 1976 "Take the Money and Run", by Gerry Rafferty from Night Owl , 1979
"Don't Take the Money" is a song recorded by American indie pop act Bleachers from their second studio album Gone Now (2017). Frontman Jack Antonoff co-wrote the song with New Zealand singer Lorde, while production was handled by Antonoff, Greg Kurstin and Vince Clarke. It was released on 30 March 2017, by RCA Records as the album's lead single.
American guitarist George Benson covered the song in a medley with "Golden Slumbers" in his 1970 album The Other Side of Abbey Road. [18] Comedy rock duo Tenacious D covered "You Never Give Me Your Money" in medley with "The End" as a single released on 2 July 2021. The proceeds benefit Doctors Without Borders. [19]
The Beatles recorded "Money" in seven takes on July 18, 1963. A series of piano overdubs was later added by producer George Martin. The song was released in November 1963 as the final track on their second UK album, With the Beatles and subsequently released in the US in April 1964 when it was included on The Beatles' Second Album. [13]
The song was used in the theatrical trailer and the track in its entirety was released on June 15, 2010. ... "Take Your Money" 2:41: 18. "Giant with a Shotgun" 3:57: ...
Two years later, in 1967, Zappa wrote entirely new lyrics to the tune and it was finally re-recorded by The Mothers Of Invention (in a more abbreviated arrangement, with the bridge section excised) as "Take Your Clothes Off When You Dance" for the album We're Only in It for the Money. The song would be known by this title from that point on.