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To make the selection process easier, Esquire is rounding up the best sad songs of 2023. For what it's worth, these aren't the saddest songs of the year. That's a whole different list.
The song also features two lines by P. Diddy ("Hey, what up girl?", which is said after he is mentioned in the lyrics, and "Let's go!") [7] [8] Lyrically, the song speaks about "excess pleasures, from drinking ('Ain't got a care in the world but I got plenty of beer') to men ('We kick 'em to the curb unless they look like Mick Jagger')."
"So Sad" is a song by English rock musician George Harrison that was released on his 1974 album Dark Horse. Harrison originally recorded the song for his previous album, Living in the Material World , before giving it to Alvin Lee , the guitarist and singer with Ten Years After .
"Don't" is the debut single by American singer Bryson Tiller. It was released on May 20, 2015, as the first single for his debut studio album Trapsoul. The beat was composed and produced by Epikh Pro. The song contains an interpolation "Shake It Off" by Mariah Carey on the second verse.
The song is composed of Gregorian chants using biblical verses while in the chorus a woman is asking Jesus Christ why she is so sad. In the music video, she first enters a church, then becomes a nun. The song was included on Gregorian's best of compilation titled Best of 1990–2010, released in 2011, on which it appears as the first track. It ...
Currently, there are 1.6 million TikTok videos credited to Gore’s song. While Gore’s more-famous song “It’s My Party” reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1963, “Misty ...
Connie Smith released a cover of the song in 1976, as a single and on her album I Don't Wanna Talk It Over Anymore. [23] Smith's version reached No. 31 on the Billboard ' s Hot Country Singles chart [24] and No. 19 on the Cash Box Top 100 Country chart. [25] In 1977, Don Everly released a solo version of the song on the album Brother Juke-Box. [26]
"Don't Look Down" is a song by British rock band Bring Me the Horizon that features guest vocals from Foreign Beggars' Orifice Vulgatron. The song premiered on 29 October 2014 during a BBC Radio 1 broadcast and the following day was shown in Zane Lowe's re-score of the movie Drive. [1] "Don't Look Down" is a stand-alone song to promote the film ...