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"Somewhere with You" debuted at number 35 on the U.S. Billboard Hot Country Songs chart dated for the week ending November 6, 2010. [6] The song peaked at number one on the week ending January 29, 2011 and held that position for three weeks. The song entered the Adult Contemporary charts at number 26 for the week of March 19, 2011. [7]
"Less than the Song" 1975 "Let Me Go, Lover!" Jenny Lou Carson Al Hill 1954: better-known version was recorded by Joan Weber "Little Green Apples" Bobby Russell: 1968 "The Love Song" 1969 "Lover, Come Back to Me" Sigmund Romberg: Oscar Hammerstein II| 1959
"Somewhere", sometimes referred to as "Somewhere (There's a Place for Us)" or simply "There's a Place for Us", is a song from the 1957 Broadway musical West Side Story that was made into films in 1961 and 2021. The music is composed by Leonard Bernstein with lyrics by Stephen Sondheim.
Home: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack is the soundtrack album for the 2015 animated film Home, based on the 2007 children book The True Meaning of Smekday by Adam Rex. It features songs recorded by Rihanna , Clarence Coffee Jr. , Kiesza , Charli XCX , Jacob Plant , and Jennifer Lopez .
Songs from St. Somewhere is the twenty-eighth studio album by American singer-songwriter Jimmy Buffett, released on August 20, 2013, by Mailboat Records. [1] [2] [3]
"Somewhere Tonight" is a song written by Rodney Crowell and Harlan Howard, and recorded by American country music group Highway 101. It was released in September 1987 as the third single from the album Highway 101. The song was Highway 101's third country hit and the first of four number ones on the country chart.
"I'm going to somewhere, anywhere, a beach house, a treehouse, honestly I don't care," McCarthy sings from a beachside balcony as she pats her hair and says, "Hello, humidity."
A well-known version of the song was the popular recording by Patti Page in 1951. It was released by Mercury Records as catalog number 5682, and first entered the Billboard chart on August 4, 1951, staying for 16 weeks and peaking at number five. [5] Bill Haley & His Comets for the album Haley's Juke Box (1960; not released as a single)