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Liv and Maddie (Music from the TV Series) is a soundtrack to the Disney Channel Original Series, Liv and Maddie. It features 12 songs performed by the show's star, Dove Cameron and a song performed by Teen Beach Movie star, Jordan Fisher. The soundtrack was released on March 17, 2015 by Walt Disney Records. [1]
Dove Cameron recorded a full version which was released as part of the Liv and Maddie soundtrack on March 17, 2015. The song was the final song from the soundtrack that was played in the series. In "SPARF-a-Rooney", Andy Grammer performs "Honey, I'm Good". This is one of the few songs in Liv and Maddie not to be part of the soundtrack.
Olivia "Liv" Rooney [1] (Dove Cameron) is one of a pair of identical twins of the Rooney family.She is the eldest child of the family and older sister to Joey and Parker. Liv left the family for four years, beginning at the age of 11, to star in a popular television program, "Sing It Loud!", to which she continually refe
Maddie does not like what the guys are doing and wants to put an end to the rates. Meanwhile, Pete wants to get rid of some junk in the house for his birthday, but Karen insists on keeping everything because she thinks it is useful. Elsewhere, Liv tries to create a new song and Maddie inspires Liv to write a song on how girls should be treated.
Maddie Heath, on the UK television show Coronation Street; Maddie Magellan, a lead character in the UK television show Jonathan Creek; Maddy Osborne, on the Australian soap opera Home and Away; Maddy Perez, a main character of the US HBO television show Euphoria; Maddie Rooney, from the Disney Channel program Liv and Maddie, played by Dove Cameron
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Forget bad blood — bad words on Taylor Swift's albums before "The Tortured Poets Department" drastically increased since her 2006 eponymous debut, according to an unscientific Reddit chart.
The song is an inspirational song primarily backed by acoustic instruments and by a prominent fiddle and it's in the key of F major. The song is in strong contrast with the duo's previous single "Girl in a Country Song": while the latter used irony and satire to criticize Nashville's emphasis on dated and exploitive female stereotypes, "Fly" delivers a sincere narrative account of a girl ...