Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
"I'm Over You" is a song by Martine McCutcheon. Written by the songwriting duo Carl Sturken and Evan Rogers, the single became McCutcheon's second-highest-charting single (behind the 1999 number-one "Perfect Moment"), peaking at number two on the UK Singles Chart in November 2000. The song also found modest success in Ireland, reaching number 23.
I Wonder Do You Think of Me was Whitley's final studio album before his death from alcohol poisoning in 1989. "I'm Over You" was the album's third and final single, written by Tim Nichols and Zack Turner. It is composed in the key of F major, following a main chord pattern of F-B ♭-F. [2]
He credits Dylan's vocal for the way it "holds so wide a range of feeling across the song" and the lyrics for "such sweet, acute, specific touches" as the way Dylan juxtaposes the phrase "I'm sittin' on my terrace" (the word "terrace", Gray notes, "enfolds terra, as in terra firma") with "lost in the stars" in the opening line. [21]
I'm Over You may refer to: "I'm Over You" (Martine McCutcheon song), 2000 "I'm Over You" (Sequal song), 1988 "I'm Over You" (Keith Whitley song), 1990
Upgrade to a faster, more secure version of a supported browser. It's free and it only takes a few moments:
"Me, Myself, and I" (sometimes "Me, Myself and I (Are All in Love with You)") is a song written by Irving Gordon with lyrics by Allan Roberts and Alvin S. Kaufman. [ 1 ] It was first recorded in 1937 by several artists including Billie Holiday and Her Orchestra, Benny Goodman and His Orchestra, Bob Howard and His Orchestra, and Dick Jurgens and ...
"Tell Me Why" is the opening track on Neil Young's album After the Gold Rush. Written by Young, it was first introduced during the Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young shows of 1970 prior to the release of Déjà Vu. [1] The song also appears on Live at Massey Hall 1971.