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"How Do You Sleep?" is a song by English singer Sam Smith, released on 19 July 2019. [4] Smith co-wrote the song with Savan Kotecha , Max Martin and Ilya , the latter of whom produced the song. [ 2 ] [ 5 ] The song appears on Smith's third studio album Love Goes (2020).
"How Do You Sleep?" is the third single from Jesse McCartney's third studio album, Departure. The song was originally included on the album's original 2008 release, although it was remixed by American rapper Ludacris and serviced commercially as the lead single for the album's 2009 reissue, Departure: Recharged in January of that year.
An artwork featuring a mother putting her baby to sleep with her music. Sleep problems are found to be correlated with poor well-being and low quality of life. [1] Persistent sleeping disturbances can lead to fatigue, irritability, and various health issues. Numerous studies have examined the positive impact of music on sleep quality.
Lennon wrote "How Do You Sleep?" in the aftermath of Paul McCartney's successful lawsuit in the London High Court to dissolve the Beatles as a legal partnership. [1] This ruling was caused by the publication of Lennon's remarks about the Beatles in a December 1970 interview with Rolling Stone magazine, and McCartney and his wife taking full-page advertisements in the music press, in which, as ...
Judy Travis turned on her baby monitor to talk to her two girls when she heard them screaming at each other instead of sleeping -- and the moment they heard her voice, they promptly pretended to ...
"How Do You Sleep?", a 2017 song by LCD Soundsystem from American Dream "How Do You Sleep", a song by The Stone Roses from their 1994 album Second Coming
Most music historians say that the first country music record to include yodeling was "Rock All Our Babies to Sleep" sung by Riley Puckett, a blind singer from Georgia. [28] In 1924 in country music, his recording was one of the top hits of that year. Another early yodeler was Emmett Miller, a minstrel show performer, also from Georgia.
In Richard Strauss's 1932 opera Arabella, Zdenka/Zdenko, the daughter consigned to live as a boy because of family finances, contrives to pretend she is her sister Arabella to sleep with Matteo, with whom she is secretly in love. The bed trick can be seen in Eliza Haywood's novel Love in Excess.