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Fields' music can be found on various movies, TV shows and video games. In 2008 he performed "You Don't Know What You Mean (To a Love Like Me)" for the soundtrack of the movie Soul Men. [15] Fields's track "Honey Dove" was featured during Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ' s thirteenth season in 2011 (Episode 10, "Spiraling Down"). [16]
"Wanna Hold You" is a song by the English rock band the Rolling Stones on their 1983 album Undercover. Although credited to Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, "Wanna Hold You" is largely a Richards composition. The song was written in a recording studio in Paris in the basement of a house of one
"I Wanna Hold You" is a song by English pop rock band McFly. It was released on 17 October 2005 as the third single from their second studio album, Wonderland (2005). It was written by band members Tom Fletcher, Danny Jones, and Dougie Poynter. The song peaked at number three in the UK Singles Chart and number 13 in Ireland.
According to the sheet music book published by Hal Leonard Corporation in Musicnotes.com, "I Wanna Love You Forever" is a common time signature song, with a beat rate of 80 beats per minute. It is set in the key of E minor with Simpson's voice ranging from the tonal nodes of F 3 to G 5 , which is 2 octaves and 1 notes.
The music video for the song was premiered on May 27 through Cee Lo Green's official YouTube channel. The song is featured on the Compilation album Now 79 despite only peaking at No. 90 on the UK Singles Chart , although it peaked at No. 27 on the UK R&B Chart .
"I Love You Always Forever" is the debut single by British singer Donna Lewis from her debut album, Now in a Minute (1996). Written by Lewis and produced by Lewis and Kevin Killen, it was released as the album's lead single in the United States on 16 April 1996 [1] and in the United Kingdom on 26 August 1996.
"I Want, I Want" (demo) - later recorded by One Direction for their debut album Up All Night as "I Want" "Stars" (demo) - written by Tom, potentially for a solo project "Alone Again (Higher)" - a track rumoured to have been written for The Saturdays "The BeeGees" - a song written in Atlanta, possibly during the same sessions as The Lost Songs
The album was generally well-received by critics with favorable comparisons to the Beatles and the Who, with critics likening Robin Zander's vocals to John Lennon's. . Charles M. Young, writing for Rolling Stone, said the album had a "heavy emphasis on basics with a strain of demented violence" and that the lyrics "run the gamut of lust, confusion and misogyny, growing out of rejection and ...