Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The lyrics, though different in 1974, were thematically similar to the final version of "Dogs". The lyrics were modified by the time the song was played live in 1975, and then the lyrics changed again when recording Animals. Once in a while I would find something uncomfortable to sing.
"Straight On" is a song recorded by the rock band Heart. It was released as the first single from the band's 1978 album Dog & Butterfly. In the U.S., "Straight On" became Heart's third single to crack the top twenty, peaking at number fifteen on the Billboard Hot 100. The song was co-written by Ann Wilson, Nancy Wilson, and Sue Ennis.
Cash Box called it a "gentle acoustic ballad which rides a melodic verse and acoustic guitar and easy beat backing." [3] Record World called it a "a light romantic ballad that should suit adult and pop playlists." [4] Although it enjoyed only moderate chart success, the song has remained a setlist staple for Heart consistently through the years.
"Riptide" is the fourth single from Sick Puppies' third album Tri-Polar, which impacted radio on 8 February 2011. Originally this song was planned to be the second single, but "Odd One" narrowly beat out "Riptide" because of its strong lyrical message.
"Promises" is a rock song by Irish rock band the Cranberries. It is the first single from the band's fourth album, Bury the Hatchet, released in 1999. The song was the only single from the album to chart in the US and the last single before their hiatus. The song, which has a heavy rock beat with strident lead guitar, deals with the subject of ...
The lyrics of the song command the user to "sit down" and "be humble." Well, we sort of think the dog only heard the first part because every time the rapper spoke he plopped himself down on the bed.
Swift’s lyric, “I move through the world with a heart broken / My longing state unspoken” seems to suggest that she hid the pain of her Alwyn and Healy heartbreaks while on tour.
The Puppy Song" is a Harry Nilsson song that appeared on his album Harry released in August 1969. Nilsson originally wrote this song at Paul McCartney 's request for Mary Hopkin , an 18-year-old singer that McCartney had signed to Apple Records and whose first album, Post Card would feature her version of Nilsson's song.