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"Everybody Hurts" is a song by American rock band R.E.M. from their eighth studio album, Automatic for the People (1992), and released as a single in April 1993 by Warner Bros. Records. It peaked at number 29 on the US Billboard Hot 100 , but fared much better on the US Cash Box Top 100 , where it peaked at number 18.
Everybody Hurts" is a 1993 song by R.E.M. Everybody Hurts may also refer to: "Everybody Hurts" (The Sopranos), the sixth episode of the series' fourth season "Everybody Hurts", a song by Avril Lavigne from her 2011 album Goodbye Lullaby
"Driver 8" is the second single from American musical group R.E.M.'s third album, Fables of the Reconstruction, released in September 1985. The song peaked at number 22 on the U.S. Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks chart.
"This track just really got hold of me — took hold of me,” recalls director Jake Scott, who at age 27 was still trying to make "that one video when you knock it out of the park."
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Everybody_Hurts_(Helping_Haiti_song)&oldid=344212523"
The original version contains a guitar mimicking the piano throughout the track, a reversed piano chord, and a lighter drum track, played by Rhys Clark. The 1983 version removes the guitar, plays the piano chord forwards, and features a faster and more upbeat drum track, played by Mike McGee.
According to the recording notes, Lynne added guitar, bass guitar and a backing vocal on 23 May, and tom-toms were overdubbed during a session with drummer Jim Keltner on 16 June. [ 39 ] [ nb 4 ] In author Alan Clayson 's description, the production represented a "do-it-yourself" version of Orbison hits such as " Running Scared " and " It's ...
The guitar chord line, it's a little guitar ninth chord figure. That was a unique thing and it became T-Bone's signature. And that chord line seems to have grabbed everybody because everybody plays it with that line in it. And it's almost like a law, that you have to, when you play 'Stormy Monday.' [13]