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"Vertigo" is a song by Irish rock band U2. It is the opening track on their eleventh studio album, How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb (2004). It was released to radio as the album's lead single on 8 November 2004, and upon release, it received extensive airplay.
The lyrics are about rejecting a love relationship, the lead singer stating that he cannot wait forever, even though his love interest wants him to wait, because time won't let him be involved in the waiting game.
The English lyrics of the song were written by Norman Gimbel. This version was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Song at the 38th Academy Awards held in 1966. In July of the same year, Connie Francis released an English-language cover of the song on her album Movie Greats of the 60s . [ 2 ]
"I Can Wait Forever", a 1984 song by Air Supply from Ghostbusters "I Can Wait Forever", a 2008 song by Simple Plan from Simple Plan This page was last edited on 8 ...
Read the lyrics to Ariana Grande's "We Can't Be Friends (Wait for Your Love)" track and see the music video, along with how it connects to her real ex, Dalton Gomez.
"Wait Forever" – 4:18; An untitled spoken word track appears on the album's vinyl edition following a locked groove after "Pancake," the last song listed on side one. On digital versions of the album, the dialogue comprises the last 90 seconds of the track listed as "Wait Forever" after a minute of silence.
"I Don't Want to Wait" is a song written, recorded, and produced by American singer-songwriter Paula Cole. Cole wrote the song in mid-1996 and released it as second single from her second studio album, This Fire (1996), on October 14, 1997. The single release was successful, reaching No. 11 in the United States and No. 5 in Canada.
Air Supply is a soft rock duo formed in Melbourne, Australia, in 1975, consisting of Englishman Graham Russell (vocals, guitar) and Australian Russell Hitchcock (vocals). With record sales of 100 million worldwide, [1] they had a succession of hits worldwide, including eight top-five hits on the US Billboard Hot 100, "Lost in Love" (1979), "All Out of Love", "Every Woman in the World" (both ...