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The fact that the song specifically says "They won't go when I go" was said to imply the friends Wonder is talking about may get to heaven eventually, just not before he does. [3] Interpreted more broadly as a hymn, the song is the cry not just of Wonder, but the faithful in general, awaiting a second coming where they are taken and others are ...
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"You Haven't Done Nothin" is a 1974 funk single by Stevie Wonder, taken from his album Fulfillingness' First Finale and featuring background vocals by the Jackson 5. The politically aware song became Wonder's fourth Number-1 pop hit and his tenth Number-1 soul hit. [2] It also reached Number 1 in Canada. [3]
On top of that: They’re incentivized to continue to try to be at least that good for the rest of the season, because if they miss the playoffs, the lottery-protected 2025 first-round pick that ...
Yvonne Lowrene Wright (October 31, 1951 – January 26, 2016) [1] [2] was an American songwriter and vocalist best known for co-writing with Stevie Wonder in the 1970s. [3] [4] Their songs appear on the albums Music of My Mind, [5] [6] Talking Book, [7] Fulfillingness' First Finale, [8] and Stevie Wonder's Journey Through "The Secret Life of Plants".
The song was included in Santana's Shaman album featuring Citizen Cope. [2] Greenwood is credited as the writer and producer of this track. A two-line refrain in the song that is repeated is "These feelings won't go away, They've been knockin' me sideways," leading to its actual and its commonly mistaken title.
[1] [5] According to Tony Parsons, Listen Without Prejudice was originally conceived as a double album, with "around sixteen strong originals" written by Michael. [6] By late September 1989, these plans were scrapped in favor of two separate albums, both scheduled for release in 1990.
They Won't Forget is a 1937 American drama film directed by Mervyn LeRoy and starring Claude Rains, Gloria Dickson, Edward Norris, and Lana Turner, in her feature debut.It was based on a novel by Ward Greene called Death in the Deep South, which was in turn a fictionalized account of a real-life case: the trial and subsequent lynching of Leo Frank after the murder of Mary Phagan in 1913.