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"You Belong with Me" follows a verse–chorus form that has a pre-chorus between the verse and the chorus. The verse and chorus follow the diatonic I−V−ii−IV chord progression (F♯−C♯−g♯−B) and each chord is maintained for two measures. [12]
In the United Kingdom, the song reached within the top 30 of the UK Singles Chart [67] and was certified silver by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI). [68] In Brazil, it was certified gold by Pro-Música Brasil (PMB). [69] "Mr. Perfectly Fine" was the most streamed track from Fearless (Taylor's Version) in 2021 with 98.8 million streams. [70]
Two of the album's singles, "Love Story" and "You Belong with Me", performed well on both country and pop radio and brought Swift to mainstream prominence. [4] "Love Story" was the first country song to reach number one on the Pop Songs chart and "You Belong with Me" was the first country song to top the all-genre Radio Songs chart.
Tito Guizar sang the song in the Roy Rogers film The Gay Ranchero (1948), while Ezio Pinza performed a version mixing Lara's and Gilbert's lyrics in Mr. Imperium (1951), with Lana Turner and the Guadalajara Trio. [21] Gene Autry sang the song in the film The Big Sombrero (1949). The song is used in soundtrack of the 2004 film Napoleon Dynamite.
Taylor Swift was head over heels when Travis Kelce stepped up to the DJ booth at a Super Bowl LVIII afterparty so he could jam out to “You Belong With Me,” a Swift classic from her 2008 album ...
"Chant" is a gospel-inflected [3] song over a piano instrumental. [4] Lyrically, Macklemore reflects on key moments in his past, [2] including his near-fatal drug overdose in 2020, [2] [5] and his deepest insecurities, [2] while insisting he will not retire from rapping. In the chorus, Tones and I sings about fighting, rising up and not dying.
The song begins with gentle acoustic guitar, which crescendos after each lyric "I was enchanted to meet you". [13] Towards the song's conclusion is a harmony-layered coda featuring multitracked Swift's vocals over synthesizers. [14] [15] [16] BBC Music critic Matthew Horton described it as a pop song. [17]
You Belong to Me (2001 film), a television movie You Belong to Me, a novel by Mary Higgins Clark, basis for the 2001 film; You Belong to Me (2007 film), a thriller starring Patti D'Arbanville; You Belong to Me (2008 film), a television film starring Shannon Elizabeth; You Belong to Me, a psychological thriller also known as Every Breath You Take