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"Million Tears" is a song from German Eurodance group Groove Coverage's 2002 debut album, Covergirl. It was released again in 2015 as a standalone EP featuring five new versions. [2] According to singer Melanie Münch, the song, which was written in only three days, tells about the heartache of losing your first love. [3]
Both Melanie Munch and Verena Rehm provide vocals together for most songs, with the exceptions of "Lullaby for love" which is a Verena solo, and "Moonlight Shadow" which is a Mell solo with Verena providing the piano in the piano version. "Are You Ready" and "The Beat Just Goes'" are club tracks, neither of which Mell or Verena provide vocals for.
Printable version; In other projects ... Appearance. move to sidebar hide. Million Tears may refer to: Million Tears ... (Kasey Chambers song), 2001; Million Tears ...
"Million Tears" is a song written by Kasey Chambers, produced by Nash Chambers for Chambers's second album Barricades & Brickwalls. It was released as the album's fourth single in 2002. It was released as the album's fourth single in 2002.
"Tears" is a song recorded by South African singer Tyla. It was released on 20 November 2024 by FAX and Epic Records . "Tears" was written by Tyla, Theron Thomas , Michael Pollack , Livvi Franc and its producers Mikkel S. Eriksen and Tor Erik Hermansen of Stargate .
The BBC session tracks were not originally broadcast. One song from the session; "Twenty Five Unfinished Plays", an early version of their 1986 single "Truck Train Tractor", has never been released but is available online. The original version of "Million Tears" from the single is not included but is available on several Various Artists ...
Lyricist Gulzar, who wrote all the Hindi version songs, stated, "In Saathiya I wrote 'Mere Yaar Mila De', which isn't a typical romantic number though it's essentially a love song." [ 10 ] Unlike previous soundtracks recorded by Rahman for Ratnam, the former composed majority of the songs by fusing the classical carnatic music genres into ...
Zubeen Garg (born 18 November 1972), his contributions are mostly attributed in Assamese, Bengali and Hindi films and music. Garg has recorded more than 38,000 songs in 40 different languages in the past 32 years. [1] [2] He records more than 800 songs every year [3] [4] and has recorded 36 songs in a night. [5] [6]