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"Stitches", a pop ballad, is the last major single recorded by Shawn Mendes after being signed to Island Records. The song is in the key of C ♯ Major with a tempo of 150 beats per minute and a time signature of 4 4. [5] Mendes's vocals span one and a half octave, from C ♯ 3 to an G ♯ 4 belt after the bridge which continues into the chorus.
"37 Stitches" is a song by American rock band Drowning Pool and the third single from their third studio album Full Circle. It was Drowning Pool's first-ever top 5 hit on the Billboard Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks chart and was available for free in the iPhone OS application Tap Tap Revenge 2.
"Stitches" is a song by Orgy, released as the band's first single in 1998, and then re-released the following year due to the popularity of their cover of "Blue Monday". It was released on November 23, 1999.
"Gift Shop" is a song by Canadian rock group The Tragically Hip. It was released in June 1996 as the second single from their fifth studio album, Trouble at the Henhouse . The song was a successful follow-up to the band's previous hit single " Ahead by a Century ", peaking at No. 4 on Canada's RPM Singles Chart.
Phillip Nickolas Katsabanis [1] (born June 17, 1995), better known by his stage name Stitches, is an American rapper. [2] Prior to adopting the name Stitches, he was known as Lil Phill. [ 3 ] He released his first mixtape, No Snitching Is My Statement , in 2014, followed by a debut album in 2015, titled For Drug Dealers Only .
A Gift of Song may refer to: Music for UNICEF Concert , subtitled A Gift of Song, a benefit concert held in the United Nations General Assembly A Gift of Song (The Sandpipers album)
"Left to My Own Devices" was written because Pet Shop Boys wanted to work with producer Trevor Horn and they needed a song to record. [5] The day before their meeting with Horn, they made a demo at Abbey Road Studios of an instrumental by Chris Lowe, with a line Neil Tennant came up with, "left to my own devices I probably would".
"Take These Chains from My Heart" is a song by Hank Williams. It was written by Fred Rose and Hy Heath and was recorded at Williams' final recording session on September 23, 1952, in Nashville . The song has been widely praised; Williams' biographer Colin Escott deems it "perhaps the best song [Rose] ever presented to Hank...It was one of the ...