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"Lay Me Down" is a 2010 single by reggae rock band Dirty Heads featuring Rome Ramirez of Sublime with Rome. The song appears as a bonus track on the band's album Any Port in a Storm , and has peaked at number one on the Billboard Alternative Songs chart.
Their most successful single to date is "Lay Me Down", featuring vocalist/guitarist Rome Ramirez of Sublime With Rome. Produced by Stan Frazier and Steve Fox, the song was originally written by Bushnell and Ramirez in about four hours. The video was directed by Thomas Mignone and premiered on MTV on June 24, 2010.
"Lay Me Down" (Avicii song), 2013 "Lay Me Down" (The Dirty Heads song), 2010 "Lay Me Down" (Pixie Lott song), 2014 "Lay Me Down" (Sam Smith song), 2013 "Lay Me Down", by David Crosby and Graham Nash from their album Crosby & Nash, 2004
Reggae rock found its rise in popularity in the 1990s in Long Beach, California, with the band Sublime. The genre has lately found a boost in popularity with the 2010 song "Lay Me Down" by the Dirty Heads featuring Rome Ramirez from Sublime with Rome, which peaked at number 1 on both the US Billboard Alternative Songs and Rock Songs charts. [5] [6]
After returning to the stage with Jakob Nowell taking the place of his late father Bradley as the band’s singer, Sublime has released “Feel Like That,” their first new song in 28 years. The ...
"Burritos" is a reworked version of one of Sublime's earliest recordings called "Fighting Blindly", albeit with vastly different lyrics. The bass line of "Caress Me Down" features the famous Sleng Teng riddim from Wayne Smith's 1985 song "Under Me Sleng Teng" and lyrics and melody are primarily from the 1980s 12-inch single "Caress Me Down" by ...
Sweet potatoes, for instance, dropped by 26.2%, while the cost of 1-pound of frozen peas went down by about 8%. A 30-ounce can of pumpkin pie mix, whole milk, frozen pie crust, and one-pound ...
40oz. to Freedom is the debut studio album by American ska punk band Sublime, released on June 1, 1992, on Skunk Records.It was later reissued by MCA. 40oz. to Freedom ' s sound blended various forms of Jamaican music, including ska ("Date Rape"), rocksteady ("54-46 That's My Number"), roots reggae ("Smoke Two Joints"), and dub ("Let's Go Get Stoned", "D.J.s") along with hardcore punk ("New ...