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Along with the song "I Want to Take You Home", "Menergy" spent two weeks atop the Billboard Dance/Disco chart in October and November 1981. [1] It was Cowley's most successful single of four Top 10 dance chart hits, all of which occurred within the span of 15 months. As with Cowley's other singles, "Menergy" did not place on any other chart in ...
John Swenson of Rolling Stone described "Bargain" as one of "Townshend's most beautiful songs." [6] Author John Atkins praised song's strength and melody as well as the Who's performance of the song. [4] Atkins goes on to say that "'Bargain' radiates sheer dynamism and excitement, and the brilliance of the playing turns the song into a ...
Actress Daisy Ridley said that she listens to the song to prepare for action sequences in film roles, [68] particularly for her performance in Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015). [69] Ridley explained that the song "makes me feel empowered" and revive her energy, comparing her character Rey finding her strength to Mulan. [69]
The song was written by the Weeknd, who composed with production trio Swedish House Mafia, along with the film's score composer, Simon Franglen. Musically, "Nothing Is Lost (You Give Me Strength)" is a "bombastic" ballad, featuring an "anthemic" melody and prominent drums in its chorus, accompanied with occasional tribal chants in the background.
Due to the popularity of the song, a remix-EP was released alongside remixes for the two official singles on November 6, 2009. [12] "I Didn't Know My Own Strength" (Peter Rauhofer Radio Edit) – 3:04 "I Didn't Know My Own Strength" (Peter Rauhofer Mixshow) – 5:15 "I Didn't Know My Own Strength" (Daddy's Groove Magic Island Radio Mix) – 3:11
All three previously unreleased songs on the Reflections: Greatest Hits compilation were released as a single. The first, "I Didn't Know My Own Strength" was released in advance of the album and had been on the "Hot Country Singles & Tracks" chart for 11 weeks when the album debuted. [6]
Eddie Vedder just gave Bruce Springsteen a special post-election song dedication from the other side of the world. “It's been a tricky time in our nation back home,” said Vedder from the stage ...
The record is a satire of the 1973 energy crisis in the United States, and was moderately successful; it peaked at #33 on the Billboard Hot 100 and became the first Top 40 hit for Goodman as a solo artist (Goodman's other records throughout the 1960s had mostly fallen just short of the top 40 and his 1950s works were all collaborations).