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"She Will Be Loved" is a song by American pop rock band Maroon 5. It was written by frontman Adam Levine and lead guitarist James Valentine . The song was released on July 27, 2004, as the third single from Maroon 5's 2002 debut studio album, Songs About Jane .
The song's guitar riff was re-used in "Ladykiller", from the album Overexposed (2012). "Earth to Move" Leaked by media hack group Music Mafia on June 13, 2017. The song was bootlegged from Overexposed recording sessions. "Crash On Me" A snippet of the song was leaked on Reddit. [4] [5]
Maroon 5 signed with Octone Records and recorded their debut album in 2002. The album Songs About Jane, was released in June 2002 and topped the charts in Australia, France, Ireland, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom. Its lead single "Harder to Breathe" received heavy airplay, which helped propel the album to number 6 on the US Billboard 200 ...
Songs About Jane is the debut studio album by American pop rock band Maroon 5. The album was released on June 25, 2002, by Octone and J Records. It became a sleeper hit with the help of five singles that attained chart success, led by "Harder to Breathe", "This Love", and "She Will Be Loved". This is the band's only album to feature founding ...
1.22.03.Acoustic, so named for the date it was recorded live at the Hit Factory, New York, is a live EP by Californian band Maroon 5.It contains acoustic versions of many of the songs on their international hit album, Songs About Jane, as well as two cover songs (The Beatles' "If I Fell" and AC/DC's "Highway to Hell").
She Will Be Loved; Shiver (Maroon 5 song) Stereo Hearts; Sugar (Maroon 5 song) The Sun (Maroon 5 song) Sunday Morning (Maroon 5 song) Sweetest Goodbye; T. Tangled (song)
"This Love" is a song by the American pop rock band Maroon 5. The song was released on January 12, 2004, as the second single from their debut album Songs About Jane (2002). [1] The track is built around a distinctive piano line and repeating guitar riff. The lyrics are based on the band's lead vocalist Adam Levine's
[5] AOL Radio stated that it was a "falsetto-pleading, yet upbeat, keyboard-popping track" with a chorus similar to Maroon 5's 2004 single "This Love". [6] Rolling Stone reviewers called the song a "funk-rock singalong" [ 1 ] that "some people might have a hard time picking out... from a police line-up of Maroon 5 songs."