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"Mayonaka no Door (Stay with Me)" (Japanese: 真夜中のドア〜Stay with Me, Hepburn: Mayonaka no Doa~Stay with Me, lit. ' Midnight's Door~Stay with Me ') is the debut single by Japanese singer Miki Matsubara, released on November 5, 1979. The song saw a resurgence in popularity in 2020, 41 years after its original release.
"Stay with Me" is a song by English rock band Faces, written jointly by lead singer Rod Stewart and guitarist Ronnie Wood. Released from the band's third studio album A Nod Is As Good As a Wink... to a Blind Horse (1971), it became their only major hit in the United States, although they had a further three Top 20 singles in the UK chart.
"Stay with Me" is a gospel-inspired ballad that details the protagonist pleading with their one-night stand not to leave them. [1] The song was written by Smith, James Napier , and William Phillips , with Tom Petty and Jeff Lynne later receiving co-writer credits due to the song's noted melodic similarity to Petty's single " I Won't Back Down ".
Ne-Yo also resung the song's chorus on his song "Stay", from his 2006 debut album In My Own Words. Gospel singer Deitrick Haddon sampled the song for the track "Don't Go" on his album 7 Days. Former frontman El DeBarge sampled the original song from his family group on the track "5 Seconds" featuring rapper Fabolous from his 2010 Second Chance ...
"Stay with Me", by Spiritualized from Ladies and Gentlemen We Are Floating in Space, 1997 "Stay with Me", by Sweet from Cut Above the Rest, 1979
"Stay with Me" is a song recorded by South Korean singer Punch and South Korean rapper Chanyeol, a member of K-pop group Exo, serving as part of the original soundtrack of the 2016 hit television drama Guardian: The Lonely and Great God.
The unusual buyout offer has upended Washington amid a flurry of executive orders and maneuvers by Trump and tech billionaire Elon Musk, who is head of Trump’s Department of Government ...
"Stay With Me" entered the UK Rock Chart on 1 August 2010 at number 37, where it remained for two consecutive weeks. In its third week on the chart, the single rose to number 3 before climbing to number 2 on 22 August 2010.