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"All I Wanna Do" is a song performed by American singer and songwriter Sheryl Crow. It was written by Crow, David Baerwald, Bill Bottrell, and Kevin Gilbert, with lyrics adapted from Wyn Cooper's 1987 poem "Fun". Released in July 1994 by A&M, it was Crow's breakthrough hit from her 1993 debut album, Tuesday Night Music Club.
Newman then name-drops several famous streets in Los Angeles: Century Boulevard, Victory Boulevard, Santa Monica Boulevard, and the Sixth Street Viaduct. Each time he says the name of a road, McVie and Buckingham respond with the phrase "We love it". [5] A guitar solo (played by Toto's Steve Lukather) follows, before the song ends with the ...
The video plays with the ambiguity between Santa Monica Boulevard and the city of Santa Monica, but it's pretty clear it's the street in Los Angeles that is intended. The song has no relation to the 1995 Everclear song of the same name, however Tyler Connolly has stated during their live shows that it is one of the band's favorite songs.
"Santa Monica" by Savage Garden "Santa Monica" by Steve Slagle "Santa Monica" by Theory of a Deadman "Santa Monica" by Tribb "Santa Monica" by Véronique Sanson "Santa Monica Bay" by Consortium "Santa Monica Bay" by Leif Garrett "Santa Monica Bound" by Alan Parker "Santa Monica Dream" by Angus & Julia Stone "Santa Monica Flyer" by the Hunters
At the time Joey was rooming with Arturo Vega in room 100 B of the Tropicana Motel on Santa Monica Boulevard in West Hollywood. [3] Hence the line in the song, "Hanging out in 100 B". The lyrics include a reference to the late 1960s television series Get Smart ("Watching Get Smart on TV").
The vacant Brooks Brothers building at the intersection of Little Santa Monica Boulevard and Rodeo Drive — one of several buildings that would have been replaced by the proposed Cheval Blanc hotel.
The mixing plant that routinely filled fleets of trucks with ready-to-pour concrete stood out as an urban oddity in its final years, a dusty, noisy industrial yard on busy La Brea Avenue near ...
The song was written by the band's lead singer, Art Alexakis. Though it was not commercially released as a single in the United States, radio stations played "Santa Monica" enough for it to reach number 29 on the Billboard Hot 100 Airplay chart and number one the Billboard Album Rock Tracks chart for three weeks in 1996.