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"(If You're Wondering If I Want You To) I Want You To" is a song by American alternative rock/power pop band Weezer. It was released as the first single from the band's seventh studio album Raditude. Initially scheduled to be released to American rock radio on August 25, 2009, [2] the official release of the single to radio was moved up to ...
"I Wonder If I Take You Home" was voted the eighth best single of 1985 in The Village Voice ' s annual Pazz & Jop critics poll. [8] Robert Christgau, the poll's creator, ranked it twelfth on his own list of the year's best singles.
And I was wondering if you’d put it on hold for me.” And I said: “Well, I’ll tell you what, you know I gave that song to Shenandoah, they just a number one, we had a number one hit with “The Church on Cumberland Road” and they called me for some more songs and that was one of the songs that I gave Marty Raybon with Shenandoah.”
"I Wonder" was met with widespread acclaim from contemporary music critics, many of whom lauded the composition. In 2017, CraveOnline ranked "I Wonder" as one of West's 15 best songs and the staff felt surprised in the level of inspiration and motivation from "such a chopped off, aggressive flow," assuring it would "give you goose bumps". [52]
The group was signed by Columbia Records, which released their single "I Wonder If I Take You Home" to the European division of CBS Records in 1983, for the compilation album Breakdancing. Stateside club DJs began playing the single from the imported LP in 1984, and the U.S. division of CBS, Columbia Records, released the record.
Taylor Swift got visibly emotional while singing the lyrics "wondering if I dodged a bullet or just lost the love of my life" amid her Matty Healy breakup.
Wonder played Moog bass synthesizer, [citation needed] drums, and piano on "If You Really Love Me", while Wright is featured in the background singing. Cash Box said of it that "Wonder, via superb use of dynamics and fine mood changes will bring this tune to national attention."
A prominent conservative activist's son was sentenced on Friday to nearly four years in prison for what prosecutors said was his “relentless” assault on the U.S. Capitol, where he smashed a ...