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Bareilles recorded her fifth studio album, What's Inside: Songs from Waitress, featuring songs from the musical. It was released through Epic Records on November 6, 2015. [79] The album debuted at number ten on the U.S. Billboard 200 chart with 30,000 equivalent album units in its first week of release, giving Barellies her fifth top-ten album ...
What's Inside: Songs from Waitress is the fifth studio album by American singer-songwriter Sara Bareilles, released on November 6, 2015, through Epic Records. [1] The lead single from the album, "She Used to Be Mine", was released digitally on September 25, 2015. [2]
"She Used to Be Mine" is a song written by American singer-songwriter Sara Bareilles for Waitress, her musical stage adaptation of the 2007 film of the same name. [1] It was recorded by Bareilles for her fifth studio album, What's Inside: Songs from Waitress (2015), and was released to digital retailers as its lead single on September 25, 2015. [2]
The album, Kaleidoscope Heart, was released in September 2010 and debuted at the top of the Billboard 200 chart. [5] Its lead single, "King of Anything", became a top-forty hit on the Billboard Hot 100, [10] [11] and was succeeded by "Uncharted" and "Gonna Get Over You" as the album's subsequent single releases. [12]
The 20 best songs of 2024, ranked. Culture Staff,Roisin O'Connor,Adam White,Annabel Nugent and Louis Chilton. November 18, 2024 at 7:40 AM. Au revoir, 2024.
There’s nothing quite like finding out that your least favorite celebrity is a bad tipper.
Waitress (also known by its promotional title Waitress: The Musical) is a 2023 American musical comedy drama film consisting of a live stage recording of Sara Bareilles and Jessie Nelson's 2015 musical of the same name, based on the 2007 film of the same name written by Adrienne Shelly.
The Waitresses were formed by Butler (formerly of the Numbers Band) in 1978 as a side project while he was still a member of Tin Huey.He wrote and recorded "I Know What Boys Like" that year, with guest vocals by friend Donahue (as "Patty Darling") and saxophone from Tin Huey member Ralph Carney, although the song remained unreleased at the time. [4]