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America recorded "Muskrat Love" for their 1973 album Hat Trick, marking the second time America had recorded a song not written by a band member. In putting together ten songs to comprise the eventual Hat Trick album, band members Gerry Beckley, Dewey Bunnell, and Dan Peek had agreed to each contribute three compositions, with a mutually agreeable cover song being recorded as the 10th track.
Songs About Jane: 2002: Maroon 5 "Sweetest Goodbye" Songs About Jane: 2002: Adam Levine "Take What You Want" Songs About Jane (10th Anniversary Edition) 2012: Adam Levine, Jesse Carmichael "Tangled" Songs About Jane: 2002: Adam Levine "The Air That I Breathe" Hands All Over (Deluxe) 2010: Adam Levine, James Valentine, Tommy King "The Man Who ...
"Moves like Jagger" is a song by American pop rock band Maroon 5 featuring singer Christina Aguilera. It was released on June 21, 2011, as the fourth and final single from the re-release of the group's third studio album Hands All Over (2010).
"Vincent" 5:55 "Wherever I May Find Him" ( Paul Simon ) 1:53 The track "Sun Down" is a rewritten version of the song better known as " Muskrat Love ," which America recorded in 1973 and would become a hit for Captain & Tennille in 1976.
Hat Trick is the third studio album by the American folk rock trio America, released on Warner Bros. Records in 1973. [5] It peaked at number 28 on the Billboard album chart; it failed to go gold, whereas the group's first two releases had platinum sales.
Willis Alan Ramsey (born 5 March 1951) is an American singer/songwriter, a cult legend among fans of Americana and Texas country. He was born in Birmingham, Alabama, and raised in Dallas, Texas. Ramsey graduated from Highland Park High School in 1969, and was a prominent baritone in the school's Lads and Lassies Choir.
Maroon 5 performed the track during their AOL Sessions, at the Top of the Pops and included the song on the 2005's CD/DVD Live – Friday the 13th. [17] They performed the song on The Today Show on February 4, 2005. [18] It was part of the encore on the "Songs About Jane Tour" and was last performed on the 2005 Honda Civic Tour. [19]
[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."