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"Goin' Back" (also recorded and released as "Going Back") is a song written by Gerry Goffin and Carole King in 1966. [1] It describes the loss of innocence that comes with adulthood, along with an attempt, on the part of the singer, to recapture that youthful innocence.
"Everybody Wants to Go to Heaven" is a country music song co-written by American songwriters Jim Collins and Marty Dodson. The song was initially to have been recorded by George Strait for his 2008 album Troubadour , but after Strait decided not to include the song on this album, it was recorded by Kenny Chesney instead.
[4] [18] The final song, "Goodbye", features a line of each of the album's tracks (with the exception of "!!!!!") in its lyrics in reverse order compared with how they appear in the album, beginning with a line from "I Love You" and ending with a line from "Bad Guy", with clips from these songs layered quietly in reverse as a motif representing ...
McCarthy had asked Murphy about the 40th anniversary of Beverly Hills Cop and the film’s iconic theme song, “Axel F.” “It’s fly to have some theme music that you could play and you’d ...
From a groom being arrested to a bridesmaid going into labor before the ceremony, there seems to be no shortage of crazy content out there. ... reception and during the first song of the reception ...
Reviewing retrospectively for AllMusic, critic Vik Iyengar has written of the album, "Henley took some time before completing his highly anticipated third album, The End of the Innocence. Although he manages to duplicate much of the magic of his previous album, Henley has backed off of the synthesizers and expanded his musical palette."
In June 2022, singer Kate Bush told BBC Radio 4 that she hadn’t listened to her 1985 song “Running Up That Hill” for “a really long time.” She hadn’t even performed it live since 2014 ...
Weir had titled the album and his original idea for the back cover was to have the white suits in rags, with the scraggly band lying among empty wine bottles, to convey the joke "Go to Heaven/Go to Hell". [2] With the back cover illustrated instead with a somewhat nondescript phoenix, the humorous dichotomy and winking irony were lost and some ...