Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Don't Wanna Know" is a song by American pop rock band Maroon 5 featuring American rapper Kendrick Lamar. The song was released on October 11, 2016, [ 3 ] as the lead single from the former's sixth studio album Red Pill Blues (2017), included on both the deluxe and Japanese editions of the album. [ 4 ]
"I Don't Want to Know" has a country music flavor. [4] [5] It is an uptempo song, which recording engineer Ken Caillat describes as "3:16 of high impact energy."[3] Fleetwood Mac biographer Cath Carroll describes the opening of the song as being "unprepossessing" and "almost lumpen."
"I Really Don't Want to Know" is a popular song written by Don Robertson (music) Howard Barnes (lyrics). The song was published in 1953. The best-known version of the song was recorded by Les Paul and Mary Ford in 1953, one of the top 100 songs of 1954, reaching the No. 11 in the charts.
An answer to "I Don't Wanna Know" sung from a female perspective, "You Should Really Know", was released later the same year as Winans' single, on August 30, 2004. Created by producers the Pirates, it features Shola Ama , Naila Boss , and Ishani, and it uses the same Enya sample as the original.
"Don't Want to Know If You Are Lonely" is a song by Hüsker Dü from their album Candy Apple Grey. The song was written by Grant Hart. [5] It was released both as a single and EP in the United States and United Kingdom in March 1986. Hüsker Dü filmed a promotional video for the song, which garnered the band some play on MTV. [6]
I Don't Want to Know" is a 1977 song by Fleetwood Mac. "I Don't Wanna Know" is a 2004 song by Mario Winans, Enya and P. Diddy.
"If I can make anyone hear this song, watch this music video, consume any of my art and have that person feel seen and feel like they have someone to look up to or lean on or message, I know it ...
"Do You Want to Know a Secret" is a song by English rock band the Beatles from their 1963 album Please Please Me, sung by George Harrison. In the United States, it was the first top ten song to feature Harrison as a lead singer, reaching No. 2 on the Billboard chart in 1964 as a single released by Vee-Jay, VJ 587.