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I Wonder Do You Think of Me was Whitley's final studio album before his death from alcohol poisoning in 1989. "I'm Over You" was the album's third and final single, written by Tim Nichols and Zack Turner. It is composed in the key of F major, following a main chord pattern of F-B ♭-F. [2]
"I'm Over You" is a song by Martine McCutcheon. Written by the songwriting duo Carl Sturken and Evan Rogers, the single became McCutcheon's second-highest-charting single (behind the 1999 number-one "Perfect Moment"), peaking at number two on the UK Singles Chart in November 2000. The song also found modest success in Ireland, reaching number 23.
"Can’t Help Myself" peaked at number 49 on the Canadian Hot 100 for the week of June 6, 2020. [7] It was a Number One hit on the Billboard Canada Country chart for the same week while setting a record as the most played song ever at Canadian country radio in a single week on the Nielsen BDS charts with 1782 spins, [ 8 ] a record later broken ...
"I'm Over You" (1988) "Tell Him I Called" (1988) "I'm Over You" is a song by the group Sequal from their 1988 debut album Sequal. Track listing. US 12" single. No. Title
Letter to Myself is the sixth Korean-language extended play and the ninth overall by South Korean singer Taeyeon. It was released by SM Entertainment on November 18, 2024, and contains six tracks, including the lead single of the same name .
"Tell Me" is a hip hop song by American rapper and producer P. Diddy from his fourth studio album, Press Play (2006), featuring guest vocals from American singer Christina Aguilera. The song was written by Combs himself, Stephen "Static Major" Garrett , Ryan "Royce" Montgomery , Elizabeth Bingham , Shannon Jones, Jack Knight, Shannon Lawrence ...
The song's production received generally positive reviews. Critics like Siroky and The A.V. Club ' s Gabrielle Sanchez believed "Talking to Yourself" has a catchy chorus. [25] [27] The former picked the track as "Song of the Week". [25] Rolling Stone ' s Emily Zemler described it as a sanguine track and a "dance-pop anthem". [18]
He credits Dylan's vocal for the way it "holds so wide a range of feeling across the song" and the lyrics for "such sweet, acute, specific touches" as the way Dylan juxtaposes the phrase "I'm sittin' on my terrace" (the word "terrace", Gray notes, "enfolds terra, as in terra firma") with "lost in the stars" in the opening line. [21]