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Robbie Daw of Idolator stated "[Don't Let Me Down] kicks off with a haunting guitar loop and 17-year-old Daya lamenting that she's 'crashing, hit a wall, right now I need a miracle.' By the time the chorus sweeps in, the song shifts into full-on trap mode" and called it a "trappy collaboration". [ 5 ]
"Don't Let Me Down" is a song by English singer Will Young. It was written by Young, Richard Stannard, Julian Gallagher, Dave Morgan, and Simon Hale and released as his fourth single on 18 November 2002 along with the track "You and I." The song reached number two on the UK Singles Chart. The double A-side single was released in aid of Children ...
"Don't Let Me Down" (Eskimo Joe song), 2009 "Don't Let Me Down" (The Farm song), 1991 "Don't Let Me Down" (Leona Lewis song), 2009 "Don't Let Me Down" (Lotta Engberg and Christer Sjögren song), 2012 "Don't Let Me Down" (Will Young song), 2002 "Don't Let Me Down", a song by Bad Company from Bad Company "Don't Let Me Down", a song by Band-Maid ...
"Don't Let Me Down" is a song by German folk group Milky Chance and American singer-songwriter Jack Johnson. The song was released on 1 May 2020 [ 1 ] and the music video premiered on Milky Chance's YouTube channel.
Weston's album was reviewed by Bad Cat Records in the 2000s. With the tracks being rated individually by the site, "Love, Don't Let Me Down" was given two stars with the reviewer saying it sounded like two songs stitched together. [27] [28] Also in 1970, Robin Wilson's album Ain’t That Something included her version of "Love, Don't Let Me Down".
[17] Author Ian MacDonald praised "Don't Let Me Down" and declared that "this track vies with 'Come Together' for consideration as the best of Lennon's late-style Beatles records". [18] "Don't Let Me Down" is the most viewed video on the Beatles' YouTube channel, with over 510 million views.
In the outro, West recalls the "I need you right now" refrain of his 2007 single "Stronger". [8] When describing the song's sound, Noah Goldstein was quoted as saying: "On Sight" sets a new bar. Nobody's doing that. There's no chance in hell that anybody's gonna put that on and be like, 'Oh, that's J. Cole'-- not to diss J. Cole. But there's ...
"Don't Let Me Down" is a single by Liverpool-based pop group The Farm released as the third and final single from their album Spartacus. It was released on 22 April 1991 (eight days before the album itself), having been produced by Graham "Suggs" McPherson of Madness. The single reached #36 on the UK Singles Chart.