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"Somewhere Only We Know" is a song composed and performed by English alternative rock band Keane, officially released as the first single from their debut album, Hopes and Fears (2004). The single peaked at number three on the UK Singles Chart during its first week of sales, becoming the band's signature song and biggest hit single to date.
The song's title was written on a whiteboard in The South Bank Show, which accompanied the band for six months in 2009. [105] "Wondering Star" "World Without You" The song's title was written on a whiteboard in Coldplay: Ghost Stories (2014). [23] "Your World Turns Upside Down" Performed during the A Rush of Blood to the Head Tour (2002–03 ...
As members of the Make Poverty History, Keane performed "Somewhere Only We Know" and "Bedshaped" at the Live 8 concert, which took place in London on 2 July 2005. Keane are also patrons of War Child , and in September 2005, they recorded a cover version of Elton John 's " Goodbye Yellow Brick Road " to the charity album Help: a Day in the Life .
13 years after “Viva La Vida” became Coldplay’s first #1 song in both the U.S. and the U.K., the band returned to the top of the Hot 100 in the most calculated way possible – by ...
The album takes its name from the lyrics of the song "Snowed Under", released as a B-side on the single for "Somewhere Only We Know". [ citation needed ] The relevant section of the lyrics reads: "You've been looking everywhere for someone to understand your hopes and fears."
Only the very sturdiest songs survive Florence Welch’s wind-tunnel wailing; consider this an amber warning for the first violins to batten themselves beneath the Albert Hall stage and shelter in ...
In October 2012, the music video for Coldplay's song "Hurts Like Heaven" was released. The video was based on the story of Mylo Xyloto, a boy who grew up in tyranny ran by Major Minus. The fictional comics titled Mylo Xyloto continued on the story portrayed in the music video when the series was released in early 2013.
Martin wrote for Rolling Stone Magazine's "100 Greatest Artists of All Time" on the band, [49] saying: "I don't buy weekend tickets to Ireland and hang out in front of their gates, but U2 are the only band whose entire catalogue I know by heart. The first song on The Unforgettable Fire, "A Sort of Homecoming", I know backward and forward—it's ...