Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Essence also included it on a list of the Best New Music of the Week. [12] The magazine Out described "Big Feelings" as a "experimental masterpiece for the ears", in which Willow "mash[es] genres and tempos". [13] Dork 's Ali Shutler described it as a "beautiful, empathetic song about overwhelming emotions and hard-fought acceptance". [14]
"Thinking About You" is the fifth single by American singer Whitney Houston. It was written by Kashif Saleem and La Forrest "La La" Cope for Houston's debut studio album Whitney Houston (1985), while production was helmed by the former, released in October 1985. [2]
"Could Cry Just Thinkin About You" is a song by Australian singer-songwriter Troye Sivan. The track was included on Sivan's fifth EP, In a Dream (2020), as a 51-second interlude, before being released in full on 9 July 2021. [2] At the 2021 ARIA Music Awards, the song's video, co-directed by Sivan and Jesse Gohier-Fleet, was nominated for Best ...
The video has gained over 14 million views on YouTube and “Espresso” peaked at No. 7 on the Billboard Hot 100 (only to be dethroned by Taylor Swift), and is No. 5 on Spotify’s Viral 50 U.S.A ...
The music video for "Thinking 'Bout You" was directed by Jake Jelicich and premiered on Lipa's YouTube channel on 22 February 2017. [32] It is a split screen visual, nodding to Requiem for a Dream (2000), directed by Darren Aronofsky . [ 42 ]
"Thinkin' About You" is a song written by Tom Shapiro and Bob Regan, and recorded by American country music artist Trisha Yearwood. It was released in January 1995 as the second single and title track from her album Thinkin' About You. The song became Yearwood's third number-one country hit in April 1995. [1] Lee Roy Parnell plays slide guitar ...
Olivia Rodrigo Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images for YouTube Olivia Rodrigo is not holding back on her upcoming album GUTS, but she does feel a “responsibility” to warn the subjects of her new songs ...
In May 1966, "Can't Help Thinking About Me" was issued as a single in the United States by Warner Bros. Records, becoming Bowie's first US release. Like the original UK release, the single flopped. The song appeared on the Pye compilation Hitmakers Volume 4 later that year, which marked the first time a Bowie recording appeared on an album. [6]