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"The Sweetest Days" is the first single from American singer Vanessa Williams' third studio album of the same name. The song was written by the same team who previously penned "Save the Best for Last" for Williams. The song was produced by Keith Thomas. It was released on October 18, 1994 by Wing Records.
One of those songs, “HOT TO GO!”, saw its biggest spike of the summer on June 10, the day after the singer performed at Governors Ball Music Festival in New York City. “Not Like Us” by ...
It's a lazy summer day all bottled up into one perfect song. “Locked Out of Heaven” by Bruno Mars Bruno Mars spent six weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 back in 2012 with this ab-fab ...
2. “Summertime Blues” by Eddie Cochran (1958) Basically a teenager himself, gone-too-soon ‘50s rocker Cochran channels that adolescent angst of working all summer long.
In 2000, Castle Records released every song of Donovan's 1965 Pye Records recordings on one collection. Summer Day Reflection Songs features all of the tracks from What's Bin Did and What's Bin Hid and Fairytale, as well as all of Donovan's Pye single recordings, B-sides and EP tracks. Castle also included "Every Man Has His Chain", a song that ...
Summer Song is part two of Chip Davis' three part Ambience collection (preceded by 2001's Bird Song and followed by Autumn Song in 2003). It was released in 2001 on CD by American Gramaphone and features seven summer-themed tracks. The Ambience collection is a series of natural recordings with musical elements composed by Davis. In June 2024 ...
63. “Cruel Summer” by Taylor Swift. Release: 2019 Genre: Synth-Pop Not to be mistaken for the Bananarama's song with the same name (see: #33), Taylor Swift pours her heart out on this pop hit ...
A song of the summer is an unofficial designation of a song that is dominant both culturally and commercially between the end of May and the beginning of September in a given year, primarily in the United States. Although the idea of a song of the summer had been around as early as the 1910s, it became a common term in the 1990s.