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This redirect is within the scope of WikiProject Songs, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of songs on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks.
"Blood in the Cut" is a song by American musician K.Flay as the lead single from her second studio album Every Where Is Some Where. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It was released through Interscope and Night Street Records on September 7, 2016, originally appearing as the first track on K.Flay's fourth EP Crush Me .
The video was released on July 27, 2007. [4] The video contains cuts of the band performing the song and a troubled couple portrayed by Harris and Moody. The video begins with Moody driving down an alley passing other members of the band and Sxv'leithan Essex and arriving at his house carrying in a box.
"Always" is a song by American rock band Bon Jovi. The power ballad [ 1 ] was released in September 1994 by Mercury as a single from the band's first official greatest hits album, Cross Road (1994), and went on to become one of their best-selling singles, with a million copies sold in the US and more than three million worldwide. [ 2 ]
Daniel Leonard Nigro (/ ˈ n aɪ ɡ r oʊ / NY-groh [1]) is an American record producer and songwriter. [2] He was the lead vocalist and guitarist of the indie rock band As Tall as Lions. [3]
The song was mashed up and remixed by Steve Aoki. [6] It is a mashup of Aoki and Linkin Park's previous two collaborations, "A Light That Never Comes", which was released in 2013 from Linkin Park's second remix album Recharged, and "Darker Than Blood" from Aoki's third studio album Neon Future II.
Brackett finds the cut in all African American folk and popular music "from ring to rap" and lists the blues (AAB), "Rhythm" changes in jazz, the AABA form of bebop, the ostinato vamps at the end of gospel songs allowing improvisation and a rise in energy, short ostinatos of funk which spread that intensity throughout the song, samples in rap ...
"Let It Bleed" is a song by the English rock band the Rolling Stones. It was written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards and is featured on the 1969 album of the same name, the first example of a Rolling Stones title track. It was released as a single in Japan in February 1970.