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Sabrina Carpenter's "Espresso" has gone viral. Read the lyric to the song and find out what they mean, and why "I'm working late cause I'm a singer" has gone viral.
"It's 'Cause I Am" is a song by American country music singer Callista Clark. It was released on March 29, 2021 as lead single from her debut studio album Real to Me: The Way I Feel. Clark wrote the song, along with Cameron Jaymes and Laura Veltz. "It's 'Cause I Am" was produced by Nathan Chapman.
The song was also performed at the free concert in Hyde Park, London, on July 5, 1969, released on the DVD The Stones in the Park in 2006. In 2007, a remixed version of the original recording was used in a television commercial for the Chase Freedom credit card and in 2008 it was used in a UK commercial for a Renault SUV.
17 years after its release, the song re-charted on the Gaon Digital Chart at number 25 in the chart issue dated December 28, 2014 – January 3, 2015. [8] In a survey involving 30 experts and 2,000 people published by The Dong-a Ilbo in September 2016, "('Cause) I'm Your Girl" was voted the third best female idol song by music experts and the seventh best female idol song among the public in ...
“I’m working late ’cause I’m a singer,” she sings with a bit of sarcasm. “Oh, he looks so cute wrapped ’round my finger / My twisted humor make him laugh so often / My honeybee, come ...
" ' Cause I'm a Man" is a song by Australian musical project Tame Impala, released on 7 April 2015 as the second single from their third studio album Currents. The song peaked at number 80 on the ARIA Singles Chart. A music video for the song was uploaded on 21 May 2015 on the project's Vevo channel on YouTube.
Written by Commodores lead singer Lionel Richie, the song is a slow ballad expressing a man's relief as a relationship ends. Rather than being depressed about the break-up, he states that he is instead "easy like Sunday morning"—something that Richie described as evocative of "small Southern towns that die at 11:30pm" on a Saturday night, such as his hometown Tuskegee, Alabama. [6]
The film juxtaposes these lyrics by presenting the song in the context of Tom, a character played by Carradine, who is a manipulative womanizer. In the film, when Tom performs the song at the Exit/In (a real-life Nashville music club where the scene was shot), he dedicates it to "a special someone". Several women in the audience, past, recent ...