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 ...
In 1966, KRLA disc jockey "Emperor Bob" Hudson recorded a similarly styled song titled "I'm Normal", including the lines "They came and took my brother away/The men in white picked him up yesterday/But they'll never come take me away, 'cause I'm okay/I'm normal." Another line in the song was: "I eat my peas with a tuning fork."
"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
Just before his death in May 2024, original "It's a Small World" songwriter Richard Sherman penned a final update to the classic boat ride's theme song he and his late brother, Robert Sherman (who ...
"Scar Tissue" is the first single from American rock band Red Hot Chili Peppers' seventh studio album, Californication (1999). Released on May 25, 1999, the song spent a then-record 16 consecutive weeks atop the US Billboard Hot Modern Rock Tracks chart as well as 10 weeks atop the Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks chart, and it reached number nine on the Billboard Hot 100.
"New Skin" is a song by American rock band Incubus. It was released as the second single from their second studio album, S.C.I.E.N.C.E. (1997).
The titular line of the song, "You can't ride in my little red wagon, the front seat's broken and the axle's dragging" is a reference to a popular call and response song in American children's camps. [1] The song's origins are difficult to trace, and there are many variations, but the song at least dates back to the 1970s.
“The Voice” coach Reba McEntire revealed the origins of her go-to catchphrase goes back to the 1992 hit “Becky Got Back” by the American rapper Sir Mix-a-Lot.