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On the album version of the song, the "Wake up, it's a beautiful morning" refrain is performed as an a cappella round as a prelude to the main track; this is absent from the single edit, which is otherwise identical. The second CD single and 12" feature a version called "Wake Up Boo!:
During this performance, she initially changed the lyric to "wake up in the morning feeling just like me". [71] While performing the song with singer Renée Rapp at Rapp's Coachella 2024 set, however, the two women performed the lyric as "wake up in the morning, like, 'Fuck P. Diddy'", flipping their middle fingers while doing so.
And now, the singer, 37, has confirmed her controversial lyric change to her iconic song “Tik Tok” — which replaces ‘Wake up in the morning feeling like P. Diddy’ with ‘Wake up in the ...
"Wake Up" is a song written by Colin Moulding of the English rock band XTC, released as the opening track on their 1984 album The Big Express. It was the third and last single issued from the album, following " All You Pretty Girls " and "This World Over", and peaked at number 92 on the UK Singles Chart .
"Woke Up This Morning" is a song by British band Alabama 3 from their 1997 album Exile on Coldharbour Lane. The song is best known as the opening theme music for the American television series The Sopranos, which used a shortened version of the "Chosen One Mix" of the song.
"Waking Up" is a song about being an underachiever, [1] in which writer-vocalist Justine Frischmann "exorcises her personal malaise" with the lines: "I'd work very hard but I'm lazy/I've got a lot of songs but they're all in my head/I'll get a guitar and a lover who pays me/If I can't be a star I won't get out of bed."
"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." Some of Taylor Swift’s songs on The Tortured Poets Department have clear subjects, be it Joe Alwyn ...
The song is one of the band's most successful singles, making the top of the charts in Canada, and becoming their most popular single released in the United States. It spent 12 weeks on the US Billboard Hot 100 , [ 3 ] debuting at number 75 the week of 11 September 1971 and peaking at number 24 the weeks of 6 and 13 November 1971.