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"Marry Me" is a song written by Pat Monahan and recorded by the group Train, for their fifth studio album Save Me, San Francisco. The song was released on October 25, 2010 as the album's third single. The single peaked in the top 40 on the Billboard Hot 100, marking the first time the band has had three consecutive top 40 hits and also had ...
The song peaked at number 34 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. "Marry Me" was featured on One Tree Hill on February 1, 2011. "Marry Me" has been certified RIAA Gold. Train released a Christmas single called "Shake Up Christmas", which was featured in commercials internationally as part of Coca-Cola's Christmas commercial series in 2010. The ...
[4] [8] Train's third studio album, My Private Nation, was released in June 2003. It peaked at number six on the Billboard 200 and was certified platinum by the RIAA. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The album's first two singles, " Calling All Angels " and " When I Look to the Sky ", peaked at numbers 19 and 74 respectively on the Billboard Hot 100. [ 1 ]
There are two music videos for this song. The first one shows the band performing it on a stage, with a large banner reading "TRAIN" in the green-lit background. Clips of a woman performing various actions in various backgrounds related to the lyrics (e.g., Jupiter, holding her hands out in the rain) are inserted into various parts of the song.
"Play That Song" is a song by American rock band Train. It was released on September 29, 2016, as the lead single from their tenth studio album A Girl, a Bottle, a Boat (2017). The song peaked at number 41 on the US Billboard Hot 100 .
"If It's Love" is the second single from Train's fifth studio album, Save Me, San Francisco. It debuted at No. 31 on Billboard ' s Hot Adult Top 40 Tracks chart. [1] and has since become Train's second-consecutive No. 1 hit from the album, as well as their fourth No. 1 overall.
A vault track from 2021’s Fearless (Taylor’s Version) features the lyrics: “No one could touch the way we laughed in the dark / Talkin’ ’bout your daddy’s farm and you were gonna marry ...
Roxanne Blanford of AllMusic says "Meet Virginia" is one of a few songs from the album Train that has "inspired hooks and reflective lyrics". [5] Christa L. Titus, of Billboard magazine in her review of their second album, called the song an "ode to a wrong-side-of-the-tracks girl full of quirky contradictions."