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Musically, "Lover, You Should've Come Over" is a folk-pop [1] and soul ballad. [2] The song has a length of 6:43, [3] and is composed in 6 8 time and the key of D major.It moves at a tempo of 120 beats per minute, and Buckley's vocal range spans more than two octaves, from B 3 to D 6. [4]
Soul Coughing co-headlined the show, and only audio of their set was recorded. [1] Originally broadcast on Chicago music video program JBTV , it was released on DVD and VHS on May 9, 2000. [ 2 ] In 2007 it was re-released with a different cover to accompany the release of So Real: Songs from Jeff Buckley .
"Yard of Blonde Girls" is a song written by sisters Audrey Clark of the Boston band the 360s and Lori Kramer of the Paper Squares, who were performing together in the late nineties as Pendulum Floors.
"Lover" is a popular song composed by Richard Rodgers with lyrics by Lorenz Hart. It was sung in the movie Love Me Tonight (1932) by Jeanette MacDonald. [1]Popular recordings in 1933 were by Paul Whiteman [1] and His Orchestra (vocal by Jack Fulton), Guy Lombardo and His Royal Canadians, and Greta Keller.
“I’ve always liked that word, but I’ve never used it in, like, everyday life when people are like, ‘That’s my lover over there,’ or calling each other a lover.
In Western classical music during the common practice period, chord progressions are used to structure a musical composition.The destination of a chord progression is known as a cadence, or two chords that signify the end or prolongation of a musical phrase.
The song is set in the key of D ♭ major with a main chord pattern of B ♭ m7–G ♭ sus2–D ♭ /F-D ♭ sus-D ♭ –A ♭. [2]Co-writer Josh Osborne said that when writing the song, he and the co-writers were composing melodies when co-writer Sam Hunt suggested to make it a "kind of desperate thing, like the guy is pleading with this girl to come over."
That's the Way a Cowboy Rocks and Rolls contained ten tracks of entirely new material. The album's first single, "Maybe You Should've Been Listening," only reached a peak of #45 on the Hot Country Songs chart in 1978, and the album's second single, "Love Me Back Sleep" peaked even lower on the chart in 1979.