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"Steal My Sunshine" is a song by Canadian alternative rock band Len from their third studio album, You Can't Stop the Bum Rush (1999). The song was initially released on the soundtrack to the 1999 crime comedy film Go , which resulted in the song receiving heavy airplay .
Len released a more hip-hop oriented album, You Can't Stop the Bum Rush, in 1999; [10] a song from the album, "Steal My Sunshine", featuring a sample of the disco track "More, More, More" by the Andrea True Connection, [11] was also released that year. It climbed the popular charts both in Canada and in the United States and became Len's ...
"My Sunshine" is a song by Australian duo Mashd N Kutcher, released in December 2015. [1] The song samples Len's "Steal My Sunshine". [2] It was the most played song ...
Be Still, a 2021 Canadian drama "Be Still for the Presence of the Lord", hymn written by David Evans "Be Still My Beating Heart", song by Sting, from his 1987 album ...Nothing Like the Sun "Be Still, My Soul" (hymn), a Christian hymn set to Finlandia Hymn. (Refer to separate section on song on that page) Be Still My Soul (Abigail album)
"You Are My Sunshine" is an American standard of old-time and country music and the state song of Louisiana. Its original writer is disputed. Its original writer is disputed. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] According to the performance rights organization BMI , by the year 2000 the song had been recorded by over 350 artists and translated into 30 languages.
"Be Still" is a song by American recording artist Kelly Clarkson, from her third studio album, My December (2007). Written by Clarkson and her guitarist Aben Eubanks , and produced by David Kahne , "Be Still" is an acoustic folk blues ballad set moderately slow acoustic and electric guitars.
"Sunshine" is a country folk song from 1971 by Jonathan Edwards, released as the first single from his debut album Jonathan Edwards. The single reached No. 4 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart on January 15, 1972, [ 1 ] and earned a gold record.
The song was The Statler Brothers' twenty-seventh country hit and the first of four number ones on the country chart, as well as the group's only number one with original tenor Lew DeWitt. The single stayed at number one for two weeks and spent a total of eleven weeks on the country chart.