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"Boston" is a song by American rock band Augustana, from their debut album All the Stars and Boulevards (2005). The song was released as the second single on January 17, 2006. [ 2 ] It was originally produced in 2003 by Jon King for their demo, Midwest Skies and Sleepless Mondays, and was later re-recorded with producer Brendan O'Brien for All ...
"Voices Carry" is a song by the American rock band 'Til Tuesday. It was produced by Mike Thorne for the band's debut studio album, Voices Carry (1985). [1] The accompanying music video, directed by D.J. Webster, received wide exposure on MTV and positive reactions from critics.
"Good Time" is a song by American pop music duo American Spring from their 1972 album Spring. It was written by Brian Wilson and Al Jardine originally for the Beach Boys ' album Sunflower (1970). In 1972, Spring released "Good Time" as their second single, recording their voices atop the Beach Boys' instrumental track.
"Boston and St. John's" by Great Big Sea "Boston Asphalt" by the Dropkick Murphys "Boston Babies" by G.B.H. "Boston Babies" by Slaughter & The Dogs "Boston Band" by Jim's Big Ego "Boston Belongs To Me" by Death Before Dishonor "The Boston Beguine" by Sheldon Harnick "Boston Jail" by Porter Wagoner "A Boston Peace" by Say Anything "Boston Rag ...
"I Need Your Love" is a song by the American rock band Boston, released on their 1994 album Walk On. Written by guitarist Tom Scholz and Fred Sampson, it was the lead single from Walk On, and the first single by the group to feature Fran Cosmo on lead vocals.
"Bad Time" is a song recorded by American singer Sabrina Carpenter from her third studio album Singular: Act I (2018). It serves as the sixth track of the album and was released by Hollywood Records as the second promotional single on November 1, 2018. The track was written by Carpenter, Julia Karlsson and its producer, Oscar Görres. The song ...
Boston Phoenix critic Milo Miles criticizes "Can'tcha Say (You Believe in Me)" as "tedium." [9] He singles out the line "Where there's a will there's a way" as an example of the song's "prosaic, cliched lyrics." [9] However, Billboard regarded the song as one of the "best bets" to follow up on the success of the #1 single from Third Stage ...
It should only contain pages that are Boston (band) songs or lists of Boston (band) songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Boston (band) songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .