Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Skin (Sarabeth)" (listed on the album, Feels Like Today, as just "Skin") is a song written by Doug Johnson and Joe Henry, and recorded by American country music group Rascal Flatts. The song was originally a hidden track on the first shipment of their album, Feels Like Today , and charted in mid-2005 as an album cut (just called "Skin" at the ...
No drama? Sabrina Carpenter doesn’t want people to read too much into her song “Skin,” which is rumored to be about her ongoing drama with High School Musical: The Musical: The Series ...
"Skin" is a synth-pop ballad with a length of two minutes and fifty seven seconds. [3] It was written by Carpenter, Tia Scola and Ryan McMahon. McMahon also handled the song's production. "Skin" is composed in the key of G major, and has a tempo of 106 BPM. [4] It uses compound time 12 8 in verses and common time 4
Throughout the song, Rihanna sounds "suspenseful" and "sultry" as she sings the lyrics "I got secrets that I wanna show you". [5] Thomas Conner of Chicago Sun-Times wrote that the singer "teases her man" and "lets him at her" as she sings the line "You've waited long enough" before instructing "Don't hold back/you know I like it rough". [7]
Feels Like Today is the third studio album by American country music group Rascal Flatts. It was released on September 28, 2004, as their third album for Lyric Street Records . The album has sold 5.274 million copies in the United States as of July 2014, [ 2 ] and it has been certified 5× Multi-Platinum by the RIAA .
"Skin" is a song by British singer Rag'n'Bone Man. It was released as a download on 26 January 2017 through Columbia Records as the third single from his debut studio album Human (2017). The song was written by Rory Graham (Rag'n'Bone Man), Jonny Coffer , Jamie Scott , Mike Needle and Dan Bryer .
O sole mio" (Neapolitan pronunciation: [o ˈsoːlə ˈmiːə]) is a well-known Neapolitan song written in 1898. Its Neapolitan-language lyrics were written by Giovanni Capurro and the music was composed by Eduardo di Capua (1865–1917) and Alfredo Mazzucchi (1878–1972). [2]
William Ruhlmann from AllMusic described the song as one of the most "radical reinterpretations" on Red Hot + Blue. [19] David Browne from Entertainment Weekly felt the words have special urgency in Cherry's "stark, bass-line-propelled take" on "I’ve Got You Under My Skin", because the song begins with a rap about AIDS. [20]