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Gavin Shane DeGraw (born February 4, 1977) is an American singer-songwriter. DeGraw rose to fame with his song " I Don't Want to Be " from his debut album Chariot (2003); the song became the main theme song for The WB / CW drama series One Tree Hill .
"Chariot" is a song by American singer-songwriter Gavin DeGraw. It appears on his 2003 debut studio album, Chariot , and was released as the album's second single in February 2005. The song addresses the overwhelming feeling Gavin felt when he moved to New York from his rural hometown; in the songs, he pleads for a (metaphorical) chariot to ...
"She Sets the City on Fire" is a song by American singer Gavin DeGraw. It was released on July 15, 2016, by RCA Records as the lead single from the album Something Worth Saving . [ 1 ] The song was written by DeGraw, Todd Clark, Jason Saenz, and Gregg Wattenberg , and produced by Wattenberg.
Chariot is the debut studio album by singer-songwriter Gavin DeGraw, first released on July 22, 2003, on J Records.It was re-released in 2004 as Chariot (Stripped), which featured two discs, the first containing the original Chariot album and the second disc featuring "stripped-down" (made simply and with minimal instrumentation) studio recordings of all of the original songs, as well as a ...
The singer also tells PEOPLE of whether or not he has a new song in mind for the reboot's theme song
Gavin DeGraw has five best-selling albums, but that doesn't mean the 37-year-old singer-songwriter doesn't have fears. "Every artist is afraid of being a one-hit wonder," DeGraw shared in his ...
Something Worth Saving is the second album DeGraw has produced with other songwriters rather than writing the entire album himself. This album features work from Todd Clark, Jason Saenz, Gregg Wattenberg, Eric Frederic, Dave Bassett, Johan Carisson, John Shanks, and Gavin DeGraw. Something Worth Saving explores many genres and sounds of music ...
The singer-songwriter got the crowd grooving to '70s L.T.D. hit "Holding On (When Love Is Gone)" and a cover of Earth, Wind & Fire's "September." "The '70s, those were the good ol' days," Osborne ...