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"I Need You" is a song written by Dennis Matkosky and Ty Lacy and recorded by American country pop artist LeAnn Rimes. It was released on March 20, 2000, as a single from Jesus: Music from and Inspired by the Epic Mini-Series .
A soundtrack, Jesus: Music from and Inspired by the Epic Mini-Series, was released on March 8, 2000, for the series. [8] "I Need You" was released as a single for the soundtrack by American country music recording artist LeAnn Rimes. "Spirit in the Sky" by dc Talk was also released as a B side with "I Need You". [9]
Queen O' Spades is the third EP by the Burden Brothers. It was released in 2002 on Last Beat Records. The disc was sold in a package along with a t-shirt, shotglass, and stickers on the band's website. This EP features former Guns N' Roses members Izzy Stradlin and Duff McKagan and Pearl Jam drummer Matt Cameron.
Natalya Golitsyna (1741–1838), Russian princess nicknamed the "Queen of Spades" because she was the inspiration of Pushkin's short story; Shayna Baszler (born 1980), mixed martial artist and professional wrestler nicknamed the Queen of Spades "Queen of Spades", a song by Styx from Pieces of Eight; Pique Dame (Queen of Spades), an 1864 opera ...
The album was first released on January 30, 2001, by Curb Records. [20] Three singles were released from the album. After having previously been the b-side to "Can't Fight the Moonlight", "But I Do Love You" was released as a single from both the Coyote Ugly soundtrack and I Need You on February 11, 2002.
"I Need You (Option A)" and "I Need You (Mindwarp Remix)", by Pendulum from 3 Knocks, 1997 "I Need You (That Thing You Do)", from the soundtrack of the film That Thing You Do! , 1996 See also
The Queen of Spades (Russian: Пиковая Дама, Pikovaya Dama), Op. 70, is the score composed by Sergei Prokofiev in 1936 for the planned but unrealized film by Mikhail Romm. The film was to be based on the 1834 short story "The Queen of Spades" by Alexander Pushkin, and was intended for release in 1937, the centenary of Pushkin's death. [1]
[20] Andy Gill observed that the song's tension is achieved through the balance of the "direct address" of the chorus, the repeated phrase "I want you," and a weird cast of characters, including a guilty undertaker, a lonesome organ grinder, weeping fathers, mothers, sleeping saviours, the queen of spades, and "a dancing child with his Chinese ...