Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The song debuted on the UK Singles Chart at number 30 and later peaked at number four. The song debuted at number 100 on the Canadian Hot 100 the week of January 31, 2008, and reached number one on the chart the week of March 29, 2008. In Australia, "Love Song" peaked at number four during its ninth week on the country's chart.
Careful Confessions is the 2004 independently produced debut studio album by Sara Bareilles. [1] [2] In addition to seven studio tracks, the album features four songs recorded during live performances. Several of the songs on the album were re-recorded to appear on Bareilles' second album, Little Voice, her major label debut. [3] [4]
Taylor Hill/FilmMagic Sara Bareilles and Joe Tippett’s relationship is a bonafide love song, and they are looking ahead to saying “I do.” The pair announced their engagement on New Year’s ...
[1] The album title, 'Kaleidoscope Heart', comes from the lyric of 'Uncharted', "Jump start my kaleidoscope heart, love to watch the colors fade... They may not make sense but they sure as hell made me". [2] Bareilles stated the song to be the starting point of the new record, and this particular lyric saw the end to her writer's block.
Written by Bareilles and produced by Eric Rosse, it was released as the second single from her 2007 album Little Voice on April 29, 2008. Following its release, it reached became a top twenty hit on the Billboard Adult Alternative Songs and Adult Top 40 charts, peaking at numbers 16 and 15 respectively, while also reaching the top forty in the ...
It should only contain pages that are Sara Bareilles songs or lists of Sara Bareilles songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Sara Bareilles songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
"She Used to Be Mine" is a sentimental ballad written and composed by Sara Bareilles with a duration of four minutes and ten seconds (4:10). The song is instrumented primarily by the piano and also features guitar and drums. [4] [5] Bareilles' vocal performance has been described as "powerful", with a vocal range of F 3 to D 5.
[4] Will Hermes of Rolling Stone considered it the best track on the album, writing that the song is "a playfully sexy bit of doo-wop pop." [1] Allison Stewart of Washington Post called it a "rollicking, harmony-heavy pop song." [5] Megan Vick wrote for Billboard that the song is a "mid-century piano parlor ditty."