Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Leave Me Alone (I'm Lonely)" is a song recorded by American singer Pink for her fourth studio album I'm Not Dead (2006). It was written by Pink and the song's producer Butch Walker . The song was released as the fifth single from I'm Not Dead in select international countries on March 12, 2007, by LaFace Records , to mixed critical reception.
I'm Not Dead is the fourth studio album by American singer and songwriter Pink.It was released on April 4, 2006, through LaFace Records and Jive Records.Following the commercial underperformance of her third studio album Try This (2003), Pink parted ways with Arista Records and began experimenting with new sounds and collaborating with new producers, and stated she named the album after having ...
An acoustic piano version of "Leave Me Alone" was released on January 22, 2021, shortly before I Dont Know How But They Found Me began performing the song live on various shows. [8] The duo made their television debut on Jimmy Kimmel Live! on January 26, 2021, [ 9 ] which additionally was the fifth anniversary of Weekes' appearance on the show ...
The song also became Pink's fifth consecutive number-one single on the Australian Airplay Chart. [5] In New Zealand, it debuted at number 18 on August 3, and peaked at number 15. [ 6 ] In the United Kingdom, "Funhouse" first appeared on the UK Singles Chart at number 155 on July 5, [ 7 ] and went on to peak at number 29.
"Leave Me Alone" (Alexander Rybak song), 2012 "Leave Me Alone" (Flipp Dinero song), 2018 "Leave Me Alone" (I Dont Know How But They Found Me song), 2020 "Leave Me Alone" (Jerry Cantrell song), 1996
Greatest Hits... So Far!!! is the first greatest hits album by American singer-songwriter Pink.It was released on November 12, 2010, by Jive Records, in celebration of Pink's first decade on the music scene.
The Indigo Girls tag along for moral support and, with lyrics like "How can you say, 'no child is left behind' / we're not dumb and we're not blind" or "You've come a long way, from whiskey and cocaine", you just know that if she'd made the song a few years earlier, it would have been featured in Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 911. You also get the ...
[4] While commenting about her voice, he said that she "belts out her lyrics like a champ." [4] Entertainment Weekly's Chris Willman wrote that the song can be skipped while listening to the album, while referring the track as a "stab at Xtina-style balladic solipsism, Pink's vocal span from G3 to G5" [5]