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"Stay" is the second single by American rock band SafetySuit, off of their debut studio album Life Left to Go. It has peaked at #44 on the Billboard Heatseekers Songs, [ 2 ] #92 on the Pop 100 chart, and #17 on the Hot Adult Top 40 Tracks chart.
SafetySuit is an American rock band from Tulsa, Oklahoma, currently based in Nashville, Tennessee.Their 2008 major label debut album Life Left to Go featured songs "Stay" and "Someone Like You", the former first achieving fame by climbing to No. 1 on the VH1 Top 20 Video Countdown.
Life Left to Go received highly favorable reviews from critics. Tom Spinelli of Melodic.net, who gave the album 4.5 stars out of 5, declared that "if you are looking for the modern rock album of the year, this may be a top contender in your collection", [6] as "SatefySuit releases their masterful, epic debut Life Left To Go with enormous melodic power". [6]
These Times received mostly positive reviews from music critics.Rick Florino of Artistdirect describes the album as "a catchy, captivating, and classy outing from modern rock's finest young outfit" that "is the first must-have album of 2012". [5]
"Stay" (2009) "Someone Like You" is the first single by alternative rock band SafetySuit from their debut album, Life Left to Go. It peaked at No. 17 on the Billboard ...
Earthsuit began in 1995 as a collaboration between Adam LaClave and Paul Meany, who began composing music together after being introduced at a church in New Orleans.In an interview with Family Christian Stores, Meany explained that a sermon was the inspiration for the band's name: "...This man was preaching about how humans are really spirit beings encased in fleshly bodies.
In 1984, P.D.Q. Bach (a.k.a. Peter Schickele) lampooned the song in his opera The Abduction of Figaro in the aria "Stay with Me". [28] Lyrics from the song were interpolated on reggae artist Buju Banton's song "Hush Baby Hush" on his 1995 album 'Til Shiloh. Australian group Human Nature included their version of the song on the 2014 album Jukebox.
The skit was a live-action version of a child's animatronic wind-up music box, performed to the tune "Solfeggio" by Robert Maxwell.According to an interview with Edie Adams in John Barbour's 1982 documentary Ernie Kovacs: Television's Original Genius, Barry Shear, Kovacs's director at DuMont Television Network, brought the tune to Kovacs's attention in 1954.