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"Lovin', Touchin', Squeezin '" is a song by American rock group Journey released as a single in 1979 from the album Evolution. Lyrically, the song is about a woman who is cheating on her boyfriend, the narrator, but at the end of the song the woman's lover is cheating on her.
Evolution is the fifth studio album by American rock band Journey, released in March 1979 by Columbia Records.It is the band's first album to feature drummer Steve Smith.. It was the band's most successful album at the time, reaching No. 20 on the US Billboard 200 chart, and has sold three million copies in the US.
The song appears briefly in the film Caddyshack, is featured as a multi-language acapella cover in Pitch Perfect 2, it is performed in a mash-up with "Lovin' Touchin' Squeezin' for the season one finale of Glee, and it is featured briefly in "Fun and Games", an episode of the sixth season of Better Call Saul.
Greatest Hits is a compilation album by the American rock band Journey, originally released in 1988 by Columbia Records. [3] It is the band's best-selling career disc, spending 836 weeks on the Billboard 200 albums chart (more than any other compilation album, except for Bob Marley and the Wailers' Legend, in history). [4]
They performed the Journey songs "Open Arms" and "Lovin', Touchin', Squeezin'" and "Open Arms," as well as Eels' "It's a (Expletive)." ... Everett said Perry "is also working on something" when it ...
The song is about Journey's city of origin, San Francisco, although it was actually written in and originally intended to be about Los Angeles.It was one of Steve Perry's first Journey songs, and was recorded soon after joining the band.
Lovin' You Is Easy; Lovin', Touchin', Squeezin' M. Missing You (Steve Perry song) O. Oh Sherrie; Only the Young (Journey song) Open Arms (Journey song) P.
The cult television show Freaks and Geeks used music from the show's time period, 1980–1981 for its soundtrack.. Because this called for using popular, established artists, purchasing the rights to use songs required much of the show's budget and became an obstacle in releasing the show on DVD; in fact, reruns seen on Fox Family replaced some of the songs with generic production music.