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"Jenny Was a Friend of Mine" is a song by American rock band the Killers. It is the opening track of the band's debut album, Hot Fuss (2004). It was written by Brandon Flowers and Mark Stoermer. Despite not being a single, "Jenny Was a Friend of Mine" is one of the Killers' most popular and critically acclaimed songs.
"He Was a Friend of Mine" is a traditional folk song in which the singer laments the death of a friend. Ethnomusicologist Alan Lomax was the first to collect the song, in 1939, describing it as a "blues" that was "a dirge for a dead comrade."
"Friend of Mine" is a song recorded by singer Kelly Price. It spent five weeks at number 1 on the U.S. R&B chart and was awarded a Soul Train Music Award for Best R&B/Soul or Rap New Artist. In the song, Price details how her lover was stolen by her best friend. The song became a pop hit in 1998, peaking at number 12 on the U.S. Pop chart.
These lyrics are proof of the power of a good Taylor Swift playlist. ... no crime,” Swift starts off the song with the lyrics, “Este's a friend of mine” — a reference to her friendship ...
"Friend of Mine" (The Screaming Jets song), 1995 "Friend of Mine" (Treble Charger song), 1997 "Friend of Mine" (Kelly Price song), 1998; Friend of Mine (Greg Brown album), 1993; Friends of Mine (Ramblin' Jack Elliott album), 1998; Friends of Mine (Adam Green album), 2003 "Friend of Mine", a song by Grave Digger from their 1985 album Witch Hunter
"You're a Friend of Mine" is a 1985 hit song, written by Narada Michael Walden and Jeffrey Cohen, with lead vocals by Clarence Clemons and Jackson Browne in a duet. At the time of the song's release, Clemons was already well known nationally as the saxophonist in Bruce Springsteen 's E Street Band .
Wheatfield Soul is the fourth studio album by the Canadian rock band the Guess Who, released in March 1969.Their first RCA Records release, the album is also notable for being the first full-length Guess Who album to feature Burton Cummings exclusively on lead vocals, without original lead singer Chad Allan.
The song was performed with Norwegian lyrics by Arne Moslåtten and is known as "Hinnmann og eg" ("The devil and I" in English). In 2003, Counting Crows included a slower-tempo cover of the song on their compilation album Films About Ghosts. While reproducing the acoustic riff, the Counting Crows version also adds electric keyboard and guitar ...