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"California Girls" is a song recorded by American country music artist Gretchen Wilson. The song was written by Wilson and John Rich and produced by the two and Mark Wright . The song was released on June 12, 2006, as the fourth and final single from her second studio album All Jacked Up (2005).
"California Girls" is a song by the American rock band the Beach Boys from their 1965 album Summer Days (And Summer Nights!!). Written by Brian Wilson and Mike Love , the lyrics were partly inspired by the band's experiences touring Europe for the first time, detailing an appreciation for women across the world.
A video clip of Cebu Pacific flight attendants performing a pre-flight safety demonstration as a dance routine to this song ended up as a viral YouTube video clip, attracting comment. [59] The parody song "Geek and Gamer Girls" by Team Unicorn was released online in September 2010. [60]
"Hey Girl" is a song by American contemporary Christian music singer Anne Wilson. It was released to Christian radio in the United States on September 16, 2022, as the third single from her debut studio album, My Jesus (2022). [1] Wilson co-wrote the song with Jeff Pardo and Matthew West. [2]
California Girls" is a song by the Beach Boys. California Girl(s) may also refer to: Music "California Girls", 2006 song by Gretchen Wilson
Undercover is an American Christian rock band based in Fullerton, California, formed in the early 1980s by Joey "Ojo" Taylor and James "Gym" Nicholson. [1] Through more than two decades and a few lineup changes, the band released eight studio albums and two live albums, and were pioneers in what would later be called alternative music in the Christian world.
[15] Novelist Michael Chabon called the song "the pocket history of power pop" and claims that it is "the greatest number-one song that never charted". [16] Far Out rated it as the 89th most underrated song of the 1970s, saying that it "bristles with much of the same simultaneous melodic pleasantries and yet paradoxical cutting edge that the ...
This version of the song was referenced in the lyrics of the Dead Milkmen's 1988 novelty hit "Punk Rock Girl". Although the song only charted at a modest number 57 on the Billboard Hot 100, it reached number 8 on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart [60] and it was supported by a music video that saw heavy rotation on MTV. The video featured ...