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Another newly completed song, "You Just Haven't Earned It Yet, Baby", was originally intended to be the A-side of this single. It made it to the white label test pressing stage and approximately 900 stock copies of the single were manufactured before the band decided to make "Shoplifters" the A-side instead.
"High School Confidential" is a song by Canadian new wave band Rough Trade, from their 1980 album Avoid Freud. [1] The band's breakthrough Top 40 hit in Canada, it remains their most famous song. The song's producer was Gene Martynec , who won the Juno Award for Producer of the Year for his work on "High School Confidential" and Bruce Cockburn ...
Songs about school have probably been composed and sung by students for as long as there have been schools. Examples of such literature can be found dating back to Medieval England. [1] The number of popular songs dealing with school as a subject has continued to increase with the development of youth subculture starting in the 1950s and 1960s.
"Hands" is a song by American singer Jewel, released as the first single from her second studio album, Spirit (1998). Jewel wrote the song following an incident in which she considered stealing a sundress after getting fired from various jobs due to kidney troubles, and she decided that her hands were better suited to writing songs than stealing clothes.
"Clampdown" is a song by the English rock band the Clash from their 1979 album London Calling. The song began as an instrumental track called "Working and Waiting". [1] It is sometimes called "Working for the Clampdown" which is the main lyric of the song, and also the title provided on the album's lyric sheet.
"Been Caught Stealing" is a song by American rock band Jane's Addiction, released in November 1990 by Warner Bros. as the third single from the band's second album, Ritual de lo Habitual (1990). The song is also the band's biggest hit, spending four weeks at No. 1 on the US Billboard Modern Rock chart. [ 3 ]
In 2015, United States District Court Judge Gail Standish dismissed a similar suit filed by musician Jessie Braham, who claimed that Swift's track was taken from his song "Haters Gonna Hate," that ...
The song was part of a fatalistic musical genre in the 1930s where African-Americans were depicted as "fated to work the land, fated to be where they are, to never change". [1] " That's Why Darkies Were Born" has been described as presenting a satirical view of racism, [ 5 ] although others have said there is no evidence that the song was ever ...