Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Skin (Sarabeth)" (listed on the album, Feels Like Today, as just "Skin") is a song written by Doug Johnson and Joe Henry, and recorded by American country music group Rascal Flatts. The song was originally a hidden track on the first shipment of their album, Feels Like Today , and charted in mid-2005 as an album cut (just called "Skin" at the ...
Produced by Shorten, the song served as the album's lead single and peaked at number nine on the UK Singles Chart, becoming her tenth top-ten hit in the United Kingdom. Outside the UK, it reached the top 20 in Denmark, New Zealand, and Portugal.
Skin" is a R&B song, [3] that contains elements of dance-pop and dubstep, [2] [4] while the song is composed with bass instruments, synthesizers and an electric guitar. [ 5 ] [ 6 ] As commented by Robbie Daw of Idolator , the song's "real" hook is "the fuzzy electric guitar" that begins sawing through the melody about three minutes in, and ...
No drama? Sabrina Carpenter doesn’t want people to read too much into her song “Skin,” which is rumored to be about her ongoing drama with High School Musical: The Musical: The Series ...
"Skin" is a synth-pop ballad with a length of two minutes and fifty seven seconds. [3] It was written by Carpenter, Tia Scola and Ryan McMahon. McMahon also handled the song's production. "Skin" is composed in the key of G major, and has a tempo of 106 BPM. [4] It uses compound time 12 8 in verses and common time 4
"Feels Like Today" is a song written by Wayne Hector and Steve Robson and recorded by American country music group Rascal Flatts. It was released in June 2004 as the first single and title track from the album of the same name. The song peaked at number 9 on the U.S. Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart in 2004. [2]
"Dakota" (released in the United States as "Dakota (You Made Me Feel Like the One)") is a song by Welsh alternative rock band Stereophonics. It was the first single taken from their fifth studio album, Language.
The magazine described the title track as "a plucky pop anthem about self-acceptance." About the song, Simpson said, "I was 102 pounds and people at the record label were telling me that I needed to lose weight. The song is saying that I am worthy to feel beautiful in my skin. It's something that every woman experiences in one way or another." [10]