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"Here I Am" (also titled as "Here I Am (Just When I Thought I Was Over You)") is a song written and first recorded by Norman Saleet and released as a single in 1980 on RCA Records. It was recorded the following year by the British/Australian soft rock duo Air Supply and released as the second single from their sixth studio album The One That ...
Harrison would musically quote part of "Waiting for a Train" in his track "Rocking Chair in Hawaii" on his final album Brainwashed. [42] Jim Reeves released it as the flip-side to his single "Am I Losing You" in 1956, [43] and then included it in his 1962 album The Country Side of Jim Reeves. [44] Furry Lewis re-recorded it as "Dying Hobo".
In 1990, British reggae-pop band UB40 released a cover of "Here I Am (Come and Take Me)" as the second single from their ninth studio album, Labour of Love II.It stalled at number 46 on the UK Singles Chart but proved to be more successful elsewhere, peaking at number three in Australia, number six in New Zealand, and number seven on the US Billboard Hot 100.
In a track-by-track commentary video released by the band, lead guitarist and primary songwriter Ben Bruce stated about the song: [1] "We're not shying behind anything, like, 'Here I am, this is me, I'm fucking screaming at the top of my lungs, I'm not trying to hide behind a false ideology: this is who I am, this is what I've been through,' and it kind of encompasses this whole record.
I Am The Forest; I Can Cry Again; I Can Get Off On You; I Can Still Reach Yesterday; I Can't Find The Time; I Didn't Sleep A Wink; I Don't Feel Anything; I Don't Go To Funerals (co-written with Buddy Cannon) I Don't Know Where I Am Today; I Don't Know a Thing About Love; I Don't Understand; I Feel Sorry For Him; I Gotta Get Drunk; I Guard The ...
"I'm Waiting for the Day" is a song by the American rock band the Beach Boys from their 1966 album Pet Sounds. Written primarily by Brian Wilson , the lyrics describe a man who is "waiting for the day" when the woman he loves will be ready to commit to a relationship with him.
Unterberger calls "I Am Waiting" a "very strange but musically attractive effort" that is a "highlight" among early Rolling Stones album tracks. [5] Janovitz praises how the song combines Eastern thought that was popular in music during the mid-1960s with "broadening sonics and higher fidelity."
"Here I Am to Worship" is a slow worship ballad with a length of five minutes and fifteen seconds. The song is set in common time and has a tempo of 75 beats per minute . [ 6 ] It is written in the key E Major .