Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"She Can't Say That Anymore" is a song written by Sonny Throckmorton, and recorded by American country music performer John Conlee. It was released in September 1980 as the second single from the album Friday Night Blues. The song reached No. 2 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart. [1]
"Picasso's Last Words (Drink to Me)" is a song by the rock band Paul McCartney and Wings, released on their 1973 album Band on the Run. The longest track on the album, [ 1 ] it was not released as a single.
One track on the album, "Seven Words You Can Never Say on Television", was a monologue in which he identified these words and expressed amazement that they could not be used regardless of context. In a 2004 NPR interview, he said: I don't know that there was a "Eureka!" moment or anything like that.
"Words I Couldn't Say" is a "downbeat breakup lament" that details the emotions the narrator wishes they had expressed to a lover when they had the chance. [2] According to the digital sheet music published by Sony/ATV Music Publishing, the song was originally composed in the key of C major and set in cut time to a "moderate" tempo. [3]
"Anymore" is a song co-written and recorded by American country music artist Travis Tritt. It was released in September 1991 as the second single from his album It's All About to Change . It peaked at No. 1 in both the United States and Canada, becoming his second of such in the United States, and his fourth in Canada.
"I Can't Do That Anymore" is a song written by Alan Jackson, and recorded by American country music artist Faith Hill. It was released in October 1996 as the fifth and final single from Hill's It Matters to Me album. The song peaked at number 8 on the Billboard Country charts in 1997.
"That's Not How This Works" is an electropop song that lyrically focuses on an ex-partner who is indecisive and confuses the other person, in which Puth and the duo members of Dan + Shay sing on the chorus at separate times: "You can't say you hate me, then call me when you're hurt / Baby, you know that's not how this works, no / That's not how this works / You can't walk away, then come back ...
"Till I Can't Take It Anymore" is a song written by Clyde Otis and Ulysses Burton. It was first recorded by Ben E King in 1968. The song was featured in The Soul Clan's self-titled album The Soul Clan. Dottie West and Don Gibson's version charted at 46 on the Hot Country Songs in 1970. [1]