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17. “Father and Son” by Cat Stevens. Release Year: 1970 Genre: Folk Like most of Cat Stevens’ music, this touching tune about fathers and sons is sappy in the best way possible.
"Too Busy Thinking About My Baby" is a Motown song written by Norman Whitfield, Barrett Strong, and Janie Bradford. The song was first recorded by The Temptations as a track on their 1966 album Gettin' Ready. Eddie Kendricks sings lead on the recording, which was produced by Whitfield.
"We All Go Back to Where We Belong" is the final single from American alternative rock band R.E.M., released in 2011. The song is the lead single from the band's final album, the career-spanning greatest hits compilation Part Lies, Part Heart, Part Truth, Part Garbage 1982–2011.
The keyboardist, Jerry Harrison, said the lack of chord changes and the "trance"-like feeling made it hard to delineate the song into verses and choruses. [8] [9] However, Byrne had faith in the song and felt he could write lyrics to it. Eno developed the chorus melody by singing wordlessly, and the song "fell into place". [7]
Rapper Mase used a sample from "Justify My Love" on his song "Stay Out of My Way", included on his second studio album, Double Up (1999). [165] In 2003, rapper Jay-Z also sampled the song on "Justify My Thug", on his eighth studio album, The Black Album , described as a "hip hop re-working" of the original song. [ 7 ]
"Keep Yourself Alive" is the only Queen single not to have charted in the UK. [10] The single received mixed reviews from the British music press. New Musical Express praised the "cleanly recorded" song, as well as the "good singer", and quipped that if Queen "look half as good as they sound, they could be huge". [11]
The song begins almost entirely a capella, as Eilish sings about walking away from a relationship to put herself first: "I've changed my plans/Cause I/I'm in love/With my future". [ 29 ] [ 26 ] "I'm in love with my future/Can't wait to meet her/I'm in love, but not with anybody else/Just want to get to know myself", Eilish sings through jazz ...
1969: James Carr released this song as a single and reached number 44 on the R&B Charts. 1977: Narvel Felts released the song, reaching number 22 on the Hot Country Singles chart. 1979: Hank Williams Jr. covered the song on his album Family Tradition, released on April 17, 1979. It reached number 49 on Billboard's U.S. Hot Country Songs.