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Alvin and the Chipmunks and Butler covered the song for the 1981 album Urban Chipmunk. Butler produced the song again in 1981 on the Sammy Davis Jr. album Closest of Friends. [6] "(Hey Won't You Play) Another Somebody Done Somebody Wrong Song" was certified gold for sales of one million units by the Recording Industry Association of America. [7]
"Free" is an urgent pop song that lyrically discusses the singer's problems with anxiety and traumas. She has said it was the last song she wrote before the first lockdown of the COVID-19 pandemic. A music video for the song directed by American director Autumn de Wilde was filmed in Kyiv, Ukraine in
They oughta get a rich man to vote like that." The family loses the farm after the mother becomes ill. "The county got the farm and they moved to town." In the end, the family ends up living comfortably well, having sought a life in a more urban location; "Well, papa got a job with the TVA, we bought a washing machine, and then a Chevrolet." [3]
"Nobody" is a song written by Kye Fleming and Dennis Morgan, and recorded by American country music artist Sylvia. It was released in June 1982 as the second single from the album Just Sylvia . The song was first recorded in 1982 by Sylvia, who was already a country music star, achieving a #1 hit and 2 other top tens in 1981.
Like other songs on Some Great Reward, the song uses a dense sound with extensive sampled percussion. The song stems from the times that Martin Gore would go with bandmate Andy Fletcher and former bandmate Vince Clarke to the church. [5] When Gore initially showed Fletcher the song, he found it quite offensive. [5] Gore describes the song's ...
"Bad Boy" is a song by the American band Miami Sound Machine, led by Cuban-American singer Gloria Estefan, and released as the second single from their second English language album, and ninth overall, Primitive Love (1985). The song enjoyed much success following up on the band's mainstream breakthrough single, "Conga".
Roan’s move toward country is probably a one-off and not a significant change of direction, since Nigro indicated in his New York Times interview that only one of the songs they were working on ...
It is an exemplar of the kind of blues where the singer knows they have made a bad mistake, but is unsure exactly what the mistake is or why they did it. [7] One book on mental health challenges uses the song as an example of rejection sensitivity, and suggests that a subsequent verse, in which the singer says "Gonna find me a new doctor, maybe my luck will change", indicates the value of ...