Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Take On the World" is a song by English heavy metal band Judas Priest, originally released on their 1978 album Killing Machine, and released as a single in January 1979. It was the first Judas Priest single to chart in the UK top 40 , reaching number 14.
"Take over the World" is the second single to be released from The Courteeners second album Falcon. It was released as a Digital Download on 25 April 2010, and the CD single was released the following day. [1] The song features in the Visa 2012 Olympics advertising.
In 2011, a chorus line in the song "Take Over the World" by YouTuber Ray William Johnson (under the channel name Your Favorite Martian) sampled the Pinky and the Brain catchphrase. In 2014, at the end of Nostalgia Critic's review of The Purge , Rob Paulsen and Maurice LaMarche reprised their roles as Pinky and the Brain respectively, in ...
On his 'I Want Blood' solo LP, the Alice in Chains guitarist/singer writes the songs that make the whole world sing… and sometimes cry, too Jerry Cantrell taps into the zeitgeist on new solo ...
Mos Def's rewritten lyrics criticize the hip-hop industry and attribute hip-hop's direction at the time to "old white men", "corporate forces", and substance abuse. Chicago pop-rock band Fall Out Boy referenced this song in their 2007 album Infinity on High with the song " The Take Over, the Breaks Over " as a direct mention to the rivalry.
Here are the song lyrics explained ahead of Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande's Oscars performance. ... opened on Broadway over 20 years ago, “Defying Gravity” has proven a favorite among ...
"All Over the World" is a song by the Electric Light Orchestra (ELO). It is featured in the 1980 feature film Xanadu in a sequence with the film's stars Olivia Newton-John, Gene Kelly, and Michael Beck. The song also appears on the soundtrack album Xanadu, and was performed in the 2007 Broadway musical Xanadu.
Kendrick Lamar refrained from rapping some of the more explicit lyrics in his chart-topping Drake diss “Not Like Us” at the Super Bowl — but that didn’t stop the crowd from filling them in.