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Victorious 2.0 "Cheer Me Up (Only One's Dancing)" Yes Victorious 3.0 (bonus track) "The Blonde Squad" "I Think You're Swell" Robbie Shapiro Yes Victorious 2.0 "Three Girls and a Moose" "L.A. Boyz" Tori Vega and Cat Valentine: Yes 4 Victorious 3.0 "Tori Fixes Beck and Jade" "You Don't Know Me" Jade West Yes "One Thousand Berry Balls" "Here's 2 Us"
"You Don't Know Me" (originally titled "U Don't Know Me") is a song by American record producer Armand van Helden featuring vocals from American singer Duane Harden. It was released on January 25, 1999, as the lead single from his third studio album, 2 Future 4 U .
The music video for it released on the same date of the episode. In the episode, Justice performs the song with Leon Thomas III, but on the soundtrack, it is Justice alone. "You Don't Know Me" was sung by Elizabeth Gillies on the season 4 episode, "Tori Fixes Beck and Jade". This is Gillies' only solo in the series.
"You Don't Know Me" (Armand Van Helden song), 1999 "You Don't Know Me" (Ben Folds song), 2008 "You Don't Know Me" (Cindy Walker song), 1956; first recorded by Eddy Arnold, covered by several performers
During her time on Victorious, Gillies was featured in several songs on the soundtracks Victorious and Victorious 2.0, including "Give It Up" (duet with Grande), and "Take a Hint" (duet with Victoria Justice). She also wrote and recorded the song "You Don't Know Me" for an episode of Victorious, [15] and it was later featured in Victorious 3.0 ...
The song was featured on the Victorious special, "Freak the Freak Out" and is the soundtrack’s most successful single released, peaking on the Billboard Hot 100 at number 50. The single was accompanied by a two-minute music video that premiered on Nickelodeon in mid-November.
Williams threw two touchdowns, his first TD passes since the Bears’ London game against the Jaguars on Oct. 13, and Williams eclipsed 300 yards for the third time this season.
In his book Eddy Arnold: Pioneer of the Nashville Sound, author Michael Streissguth describes how Arnold and Walker composed the song: [2]. Cindy Walker, who had supplied Eddy with "Take Me in Your Arms and Hold Me" (a number-one country record in 1949 and Eddy's first Cindy Walker release), recalled discussing the idea for "You Don't Know Me" with Eddy as she was leaving one of Nashville's ...