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"Times Like These" is in D Mixolydian mode and the section that begins at 0:13 is in 7/4 time. The chorus of the song is also grouped in bars of 3 rather than the regular bars of 4. The intro starts in 8/4 time for 4 bars, then switches to 7/4 for 8 bars and then 3 bars of 8/4 again before leading into the first verse, which is also in 8/4.
"Times Like These" (song), by Foo Fighters, 2003, and a Live Lounge Allstars charity single, 2020 "Times Like These", a 2022 song by Five Finger Death Punch from AfterLife "Times Like These", a 2010 song by Jack Johnson
Those tracks recorded specifically for the project were the title track (a song Danko had written in the 1970s but had yet to find a place for), "Ripple" (suggested by the President of Breeze Hill Records, who issued the album), "All Our Past Times" (in keeping with Danko's revisiting of a song from his younger days), "This Wheel's on Fire" (a ...
Dave Grohl couldn’t hold back the tears as he and the Foo Fighters performed “Times Like These” on Saturday during the Taylor Hawkins tribute show at the Wembley Arena in London. Grohl, and ...
The lead single "All My Life" had been released on September 7, [33] [69] and the band issued three more songs as singles in 2003: "Times Like These", [70] "Low", [71] and "Have It All". [72] BMG became partners with telecom firm O2 and music provider Musiwave to promote the album in Europe with a special campaign focused on cellphones. [73]
All songs written by Jack Johnson, except where noted. "Times Like These" – 2:22 "The Horizon Has Been Defeated" – 2:33 "Traffic in the Sky" – 2:50
[9] [10] She also recorded "Swan Song" for the 2019 film Alita: Battle Angel, and "High", a collaboration with Whethan, for the Fifty Shades Freed soundtrack. [11] [12] In 2017 and 2020, Lipa featured on charity singles "Bridge over Troubled Water" and "Times Like These" as part of the Artists for Grenfell and Radio One Allstars, respectively ...
"'In Times Like These" is a song written by Kye Fleming and Dennis Morgan, and recorded by American country music artist Barbara Mandrell. It was released in April 1983 as the lead single from the album Spun Gold. It peaked at number 4 on the U.S. Billboard Hot Country Singles chart and number 6 on the Canadian RPM Country Tracks chart. [1]