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The keyboardist, Jerry Harrison, said the lack of chord changes and the "trance"-like feeling made it hard to delineate the song into verses and choruses. [8] [9] However, Byrne had faith in the song and felt he could write lyrics to it. Eno developed the chorus melody by singing wordlessly, and the song "fell into place". [7]
The song, three minutes and twenty-nine seconds long, is in the key of E major, changing at the end to D major, with a tempo of 94 beats per minute. It uses many orchestral musical styles and instruments, primarily piano and strings. A love song, it makes lyrical references to Donald Glover, and Frank Ocean's 2016 album Blonde.
Alive in Seattle is a live DVD and album released in 2003 by the American rock band Heart. It is a recording of their final concert in Seattle, during their "Summer of Love Tour" in summer 2002. It is a recording of their final concert in Seattle, during their "Summer of Love Tour" in summer 2002.
At a time when songwriting and production credits often run for pages, JVKE’s “golden hour” is a distinct outlier. From its piano intro and rap-sung verses to the soaring chorus and strings ...
The song was later covered by Linda Ronstadt, who would use the song as the title track for her seventh solo LP. [2] The lyrics of the song describe the latter days of a relationship between a man and a woman, with the woman accepting that "nothing's working out the way they planned" before the man accepts that "she needs to be free".
The song was released in July 1971, and became an international hit, charting at number 3 in the Dutch Top 40, number 4 on Ultratop, number 4 in Germany, and number 1 in Switzerland. It is listed on #7 on the Dutch public broadcasting organization's top 200 of the 1970s. [1]
"Even It Up" is a song recorded by the rock band Heart. It was released in 1980 as the first single from the band's fifth studio album Bebe le Strange.The song is an uptempo rock and roll number which lyrically is sung by a woman who is demanding that her lover "even it up" by reciprocating the effort that she has put forth in their relationship.
The song’s title comes from a poem by Thomas Osbert Mordaunt.. During the band's appearance on the live music TV show Cold: Live At The Chapel, Richards revealed the song was written while he was housesitting for Deborah Conway, and was inspired by, and named after, a book she owned about an Australian wartime photographer Neil Davis.