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Some fellows look and find the sunshine I always look and find the rain Some fellows make a winning some time I never even make a gain, believe me I'm always chasing rainbows Waiting to find a little bluebird in vain [2] I've looked to the west as the sun goes down And I've followed its glorious rays But the faster I'd run I would miss the sun
Happiness Is is a 1966 LP by Ray Conniff. [1] The title track, and single, "Happiness Is" is a song written by Paul Parnes and Paul Evans, a modified version of the song was later used for four years as an advertising jingle for Kent cigarettes .
The lyrics are about a narrator finding happiness after a divorce. [ 22 ] [ 23 ] Stereogum 's Tom Breihan said that Swift's narrator on the song is in a "mid-breakup" and tries to console both herself and the person she hurt ("There'll be happiness after you / But there was happiness because of you / Both of these things can be true / There is ...
"Happiness" is a song written by American country musician Bill Anderson, and first recorded by Anderson on his 1963 album Still. [ 1 ] In the United Kingdom, the song is best known in the version by comedian and singer Ken Dodd .
"Happiness" is a disco song. [2] The song is performed in the key of B major with a tempo of 118 beats per minute in common time. The band's vocals span from F ♯ 3 to G ♯ 4 and follows a chord progression of B–G ♯ m 7 –F ♯ –B–G ♯ m 7 –D ♯ m 7. [6]
"Happiness" is the first single from Vanessa Williams' fifth studio album, Next. Written and produced by Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis and released through Mercury Records in July 1997, it reached number 25 on the US Billboard Adult R&B Airplay Chart, number 23 on the Mainstream R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay chart, and number 38 on the R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay.
Image credits: milwbrewsox #7. My wife and I have this ceiling fan/light in our bedroom in the house we moved into two years ago. It has a remote control for the fan and lights.
"Happiness" is a song by the English vocalist Robert Palmer, which was released in 1991 as the fifth and final single from his tenth studio album Don't Explain. [2] The song was written by Palmer, and produced by Teo Macero and Palmer.