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Mraz in the music video for "I'm Yours". The music video debuted on March 14, 2008. I'm Yours was later featured as the Record of the Week on Scott Mills's BBC Radio One show on November 10, 2008. Since being added to YouTube it has been viewed over 820 million times as of late September 2024. It was filmed in Hawaii (Oahu and Kauai) in 2008 ...
"I Won't Give Up" is a song by American singer-songwriter Jason Mraz. It was released as the first official single from his fourth studio album, Love Is a Four Letter Word , on December 26, 2011, via iTunes . [ 1 ]
Later, "I Won't Give Up" was released as the album's first official single on January 3, 2012. The song peaked at number 8 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 . The song was initially presented as a lyric video around its January release, before another video was released in March 2012.
Jason Thomas Mraz (/məˈræz/; [5] born June 23, 1977) is an American singer-songwriter and guitarist. He rose to prominence with the release of his debut studio album, Waiting for My Rocket to Come (2002), which spawned the single "The Remedy (I Won't Worry)" that peaked at number 15 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. [6]
"I'm Yours" (1952 song), a song written by Robert Mellin, also covered by Eddie Fisher and others "I'm Yours (Use Me Anyway You Wanna)", a 1971 song made popular by Ike and Tina Turner "I'm Yours" (Elvis Presley song), 1961 I'm Yours (Dickie Rock song), cover of the Elvis song, 1964 "I'm Yours" (Jason Mraz song), 2008 "I'm Yours" (Ringo Starr ...
I Won't Give Up; I'll Do Anything (song) I'm Yours (Jason Mraz song) If It Kills Me; J. Jump Right In; L. Love Someone (Jason Mraz song) Lucky (Jason Mraz and Colbie ...
During Tuesday’s Knockout Round, a contestant named Lennon VanderDoes (from Team Niall Horan) took center stage to sing Jason Mraz’s “I Won’t Give Up.” And boy did the 27-year-old put on
We Sing. We Dance. We Steal Things. is the third studio album by American musician Jason Mraz, released on May 12, 2008. [1] The album peaked at number three in the Billboard 200, making it Mraz's highest-peaking album at the time.