Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
She's Gone (Hall & Oates song) Should I Stay or Should I Go; Silver Springs (song) So Long (Russ Morgan song) So Long, It's Been Good to Know Yuh; So Long, Mother; Softly, as I Leave You (song) Somebody's Always Saying Goodbye; Someone Else May Be There While I'm Gone; The Sound of Goodbye; Stay (The Kid Laroi and Justin Bieber song)
Contemporary reviews of "50 Ways to Leave Your Lover" were positive, with Billboard called it an "excellent song" that has "very clever lyrics" and an "easy to listen to melody." [8] Cash Box said that it is "a clever, commercial song about the elasticity of love, how easy it is to pull away and equally easy to snap back with it."
The editor concluded, that "this is a beautiful love song that gets better the more you play it." [ 5 ] People Magazine stated in their review of A Love Like Ours , that songs like "If You Ever Leave Me" "stand out simply because they don't drip with sentimentality and because Streisand allows a bit of blues to creep into her vocals."
Swift also has a number of songs about her family, including “The Best Day,” “Never Grow Up,” “Soon You’ll Get Better” and “Marjorie,” where she sings about her relationship with ...
So it's fare-thee-well, my own true love, We'll meet an-other day, an-other time; It's not the leavin' that's a-grievin' me, But my darlin' who's bound to stay behind. [14] Obvious similarities aside, the story and sentiments of the two songs differ. In "The Leaving of Liverpool", the narrator is bound for California by sea and promises to ...
"Even Though I'm Leaving" is described as a "soft, mandolin-infused country song" and "stone-cold tear-jerker" by the blog Taste of Country.Co-written by Combs along with Wyatt Durrette and Ray Fulcher, the song features a dramatic interaction between a father and son. [1]
Being about a failed relationship in their life, LP wrote the song after realizing that their girlfriend was not going to be their partner anymore. "I felt like my lover was drifting away – slowly leaving the building – and there was nothing that I could do," they stated.
"Break Up with Him" is a song written and recorded by American country music group Old Dominion. Originally released as the second single off their self-titled EP on ReeSmack in January 2015, the band later signed with RCA Nashville in February 2015 and re-released the song on May 11 as the lead single from their debut album Meat and Candy.