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"Somewhere with You" debuted at number 35 on the U.S. Billboard Hot Country Songs chart dated for the week ending November 6, 2010. [6] The song peaked at number one on the week ending January 29, 2011 and held that position for three weeks. The song entered the Adult Contemporary charts at number 26 for the week of March 19, 2011. [7]
"Somewhere" is a song by the Swedish girl group Bubbles. The song, which is from the group's 2002 album Inbetween , was released in 2002 to promote the animated film, Ice Age . It entered the Swedish charts on 26 April 2002, peaking at number 10 during a 12-week chart run.
"Somewhere", sometimes referred to as "Somewhere (There's a Place for Us)" or simply "There's a Place for Us", is a song from the 1957 Broadway musical West Side Story that was made into films in 1961 and 2021. The music is composed by Leonard Bernstein with lyrics by Stephen Sondheim.
"Someday, Someway" is a song by American rock musician Marshall Crenshaw. The song was released on his 1982 self-titled debut album. A breakthrough song for Crenshaw, "Someday, Someway" originated as a take on Gene Vincent's "Lotta Lovin'". Crenshaw wanted to use the beat to create a hypnotic effect and wrote a new melody around it.
"Someone Somewhere Tonight" is a song co-written and recorded by Walt Wilkins for his 2005 album, Mustang Island. Since then it has been covered by several artists including Kenny Rogers for his 2006 album, Water & Bridges, Pam Tillis for her 2007 album, RhineStoned, and by Dutch artist Mark Blomsteel (who first recorded it in 2012, but later released it as single from his 2019 album, Burning ...
The music video was directed by Shaun Silva and was released on June 30, 2014. It shows Chesney partying and making music with a group of young men and women in a brightly colored school bus . [ 20 ] [ 21 ] Some have suggested the bus in the video is a nod to Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters and their bus Further . [ 22 ]
"Somewhere Out There" is a song by Canadian alternative rock group Our Lady Peace. It was released on April 1, 2002, as the lead single from their fifth studio album, Gravity . It was the most successful single from the album, reaching number 44 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and peaking inside the top 40 on five other Billboard charts.
Cash Box called it a "masterful cut" that "generates a powerful vision of steamy life in a more primitive phase, on a river from soul of Louisiana, or the Nile, or the mortal soul" and is "done with spoken word and a chant-like vocal and poetic lyrics that speak with a novelist's tongue and the heart of Huckleberry."