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The original version of the song refers to Thatcher, "Er gwaetha hen Fagi a'i chriw" ('Despite old Maggie and her crew'). [13] Following Thatcher's ordered closure of Welsh and other British mines, fewer than 40% of Welsh households were headed by someone in full-time employment by 1986 and "two-thirds of Welsh miners would become redundant".
The song climbed and entered the top thirty of the chart the week of July 29, 2003, at number 28, where the song peaked. The song spent 16 weeks on the chart. After being released as a CD single, "You're Still Here" debuted on the Hot Country Singles Sales chart the week of June 28, 2003, at number seven and peaked at number six the following week.
This song had been written as a throwaway song for a minor character, but Yvonne De Carlo was a high-profile name in the cast, and the creative team felt she deserved a more substantial song. The librettist James Goldman suggested it should be a song about survival that said 'I'm still here.' Sondheim borrowed the phrase for the song title. [2]
The albums' packaging, designed by Yoshiki Usa, includes the song lyrics and the illustrations featured in Supercell Works 3. Excluding the final track "We're Still Here", each song is given an illustration by one of four artists, three of whom are members of Supercell. [13] These illustrators are listed below with the track listing.
The film portrays the Paivas’ idyllic family life by Ipanema beach in Rio de Janeiro in the early ‘70s, while, in the background, military police cracks down on leftist guerrilla groups ...
"I'm Still Here (Jim's Theme)" is a song written by the Goo Goo Dolls frontman John Rzeznik for the Disney film Treasure Planet. The song was released by Rzeznik as a solo track, which is autobiographical, loosely inspired by Rzeznik’s own life growing up in Buffalo, New York .
We're Here Because We're Here may refer to: We're Here Because We're Here, by the band Anathema; We're Here Because We're Here (art event), commemorating the 100th anniversary of the first day of the Battle of the Somme, on 1 July 2016 "We're Here Because We're Here", song sung in the World War I trenches to the tune of "Auld Lang Syne".
While the song has taken on so many trends and meanings since it was released in 2020, the current “right where you left me” TikTok trend is actually a hopeful one that flips the meaning of ...