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Bob Seger attacked the political system in ‘2 + 2 = ?’ (1968): ‘it’s the rules not the soldier that I find the real enemy.’" [3] The original studio version had a dead stop, or sudden cut to silence, placed near the end. On the 45 version, however, there is a guitar chord added at this point in the song, because radio stations fear ...
The B-side of some versions of the "Like a Rock" single was "Livin' Inside My Heart". Seger said of the song: I wanted so bad to put "Living Inside My Heart" on my Greatest Hits, Volume 2 record and I fought and fought and fought. My manager said: “No, that’s a movie song.” I said: “No, I want it on there.” It’s beautiful.
"We've Got Tonite" is a song written by American rock musician Bob Seger, from his album Stranger in Town (1978). The single record charted twice for Seger, and was developed from a prior song that he had written. Further versions charted in 1983 for Kenny Rogers as a duet with Sheena Easton, and again in 2002 for Ronan Keating.
The performance is a piano-oriented interpretation of "Night Moves" [34] that has never been commercially released. In 1995 and 1996, the song was used in the closing credits of TNN's broadcast of The Winston. The song can be heard twice during the first season of The O.C. Bob Seger is one of the character, Julie's, favorite singers.
"Katmandu" is a song written and recorded by American rock artist Bob Seger. It was initially released on his 1975 studio album Beautiful Loser, which became the first of ten consecutive platinum albums for Seger. [1] The song was later featured on his live album Live Bullet.
Before performing the song with Seger at CMT Crossroads in 2014, Jason Aldean said "it was a song I used to always sing" when playing nightclubs & bars at 14, 15 years old, even though he didn't really know "what the hell it meant." After stating it had a whole new meaning for him 20-something years later, he added "it's always been one of my ...
"Still the Same" is a 1978 song written and recorded by the American singer Bob Seger. It hit #4 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart [2] and was an international hit. The song was covered by Bonnie Guitar on her 1987 album What Can I Say. This version was a country hit in 1989, reaching No. 79 on the Billboard US Country chart. [3]
The song remains a staple on classic rock radio. Billboard felt that the song's highlights are Seger's "rough-edged vocals and the power charged instrumentation." [14] Cash Box said it is "a piece of infectious raucous joy" that is a highlight of Seger's concerts. [15] In Australia, the song was released twice and charted for a total of 55 weeks.