Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Who Really Cares is the second studio album by American indie pop band TV Girl. It was self-released on February 26, 2016 [ 1 ] and is described by the band as "an album about sex or lack thereof, and its consequences or lack thereof".
TV Girl frequently samples songs and media from the 1960s in their music. An example of this is seen in the song "Lovers Rock", where the backing track is created from a looped sample of the intro to The Shirelles' 1960 single "The Dance is Over". In a post to Reddit, Petering writes he "..never gets tired of seeking out old and obscure music ...
Alice ("There's a New Girl in Town") – (music by David Shire) (lyrics by Alan and Marilyn Bergman) (sung by Linda Lavin) Alien Nation – Kenneth Johnson and David Kurtz; Aliens in the Family – Todd Rundgren; All at No. 20 – Denis King; All Creatures Great and Small – ("Piano Parchment") by Johnny Pearson; Allegra's Window – Dan ...
French Exit is the debut studio album by American indie pop band TV Girl. It was released on June 5, 2014 and follows the release of their first mixtape The Wild, The Innocent, The TV Shuffle and their third EP Lonely Women. [1] The band describe the album's songs as "about lost lust, too much love and not enough." [2]
The song was released as the third single in the United Kingdom as part of the Roulette Summer Edition EP on 2 September 2013. [42] "Broken" and "Ayo" was released as the fourth and fifth single in the United Kingdom and Ireland in the same day: 2 February 2014. [43] The music video for "Broken" premiered on 31 January 2013. [44]
Beyoncé's daughter Blue Ivy Carter just joined her mother on a public stage for the first time.. The superstar gave her first live performance since the release of Renaissance tonight, as part of ...
Funny Girl is the soundtrack album to the 1968 musical film of the same name, performed by its star Barbra Streisand. Released on the vinyl album format in stereo in 1968, the soundtrack was subsequently released in quadraphonic sound vinyl, cassette , and compact disc .
The City of Soundsville: Music from The Powerpuff Girls was released on September 18, 2001, on CD, audio cassette, and vinyl record. [14] Heather Phares of the All Music Guide was quite pleased with the soundtrack, calling it "a complete delight" and "without a doubt one of the coolest children's albums in recent memory."