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Love Makes the World is the 16th studio album by Carole King, released in 2001. Distributed by Koch Records , it was her first release on her Rockingale Records label. As of 2024, it is her most recent album of new material.
For international versions of his L-O-V-E album, Nat King Cole also recorded versions of "L-O-V-E" and other songs, in Japanese (mixed with English words), [4] Italian, [5] German, [6] Spanish [7] and French. [8] In this last language, the song was renamed "Je Ne Repartirai Pas" and translated by Jean Delleme.
The song is an up-tempo in the key of E-flat major, beginning with pedal steel guitar and electric guitar. The narrator, in the first verse, has just found out that her ex-boyfriend is about to be married to another woman. Upon discovering the wedding announcement in a paper, she expresses her dissatisfaction with the ex-boyfriend's lover.
Motown originally created an album to capitalize on the success of the single, but when the single failed to hit the top of the charts the album was scrapped, and the single was included rather on Diana Ross and the Supremes' "Love Child" LP. The shelved LP track list was intended as follows: [citation needed] Side One:
The song has been covered a number of times, including by Seal and Ruby Amanfu. Boyz II Men covered the song for Under the Streetlight (2017), with Amber Riley featured on the track. [40] In 2018, Seely credited its use across multiple genres to "the haunting melody" and "the vulnerability of the lyrics". [5]
"Look What Love Has Done" is a song by American singer Patty Smyth, released in November 1994 as the theme song to the American comedy film Junior. It was written by Carole Bayer Sager, James Ingram, James Newton Howard and Smyth, and was produced by Howard. The song was nominated for Academy and Golden Globe Awards.
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The lyrics poke fun at the common depiction of love in popular songs as a host of malignant symptoms, saying, "This can't be love because I feel so well." The song was a hit for the orchestras of Horace Heidt (vocal by Larry Cotton) and Benny Goodman (vocal by Martha Tilton ) in late 1938 and early 1939.