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"Play with Fire" is a song by the English rock band the Rolling Stones, originally released as B-side to the song "The Last Time". It was later included on the American release of their 1965 album Out of Our Heads .
Play with Fire, by The Reign of Kindo, 2013 "Play with Fire" (Hilary Duff song), 2006 "Play with Fire" (Rolling Stones song), 1965 "Play with Fire", a song by Kendrick Lamar from C4 "Play with Fire", a song by Nico Santos
This song was also used on the soundtrack of the movie "Shoot The Moon" (1982; directed by Alan Parker). As the marriage between the two lead characters, Faith (Diane Keaton) and George (Albert Finney) slowly collapses, George is having an affair with a young divorcee (Karen Allen); Faith then takes up with a young handyman (Peter Weller).
Playing with Fire (Kevin Federline album) or the title song, 2006; Playing with Fire (Jennifer Nettles album) or the title song, 2016; Playing with Fire (Spacemen 3 album), 1989; Playing w/ Fire, an EP by Redveil, 2023; Playing with Fire, by Dervish, 1995; Playing with Fire, by Dave Kilminster, 2004; Playing with Fire, by Frank Yamma and ...
Nanker Phelge (also known as Nanker-Phelge) was a collective pseudonym used between 1963 and 1965 for several Rolling Stones group compositions. [1] According to manager Andrew Loog Oldham the 'Nanker Phelge' credit was mostly used for tracks where the origin lay in blues standards from the 1950s they heard when visiting the Chess studios in Chicago.
"Playing with Fire" is a song by English hip-hop trio N-Dubz featuring English musician Mr Hudson. The song is the second single taken from N-Dubz' second album, Against All Odds. It is a rap song with lyrics about a girl realising that her boyfriend is cheating on her and trying to get him to confess.
Margot Robbie appeared on the “Talking Pictures” podcast with TCM’s Ben Mankiewicz and revealed that her “Wolf of Wall Street” director Martin Scorsese actually offered her the chance ...
Playing with Fire is the only studio album by American dancer and rapper Kevin Federline, released on October 31, 2006, through Federline Records. The album's executive producer was Federline's then-wife Britney Spears, who also contributed vocals to "Crazy". She and Federline composed two tracks that did not get included in the album.