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"You Only Live Once" is song by American rock band the Strokes. It is the opening track on their third studio album, First Impressions of Earth. The song was written by Julian Casablancas with production from David Kahne and Gordon Raphael. It was released as the third and final single from the album in 2006 by RCA and Rough Trade Records.
The cover was released in 2006 as the B-side to "You Only Live Once". Casablancas also provided bass guitar and backing vocals on Albert Hammond, Jr.'s "Scared" on his solo album Yours to Keep . He subsequently played a Casio guitar and provided backing vocals on " Sick, Sick, Sick " by Queens of the Stone Age .
The CD1 version of the single featured their cover of Ramones' "Life's a Gas" (and contains parts of two other Ramones songs; "The KKK Took My Baby Away" and "Don't Go") as a B-side, while the CD2 version featured an early version of the song "You Only Live Once" (previously named "I'll Try Anything Once"), along with the single's music video.
Drake joined The Beatles and Ariana Grande as the only artists ever to chart songs at Nos. 1, 2, and 3 simultaneously — and the first artist in history to have all three songs debut in those ...
(You Only Live Once!), a waltz by Johann Strauss II "You Only Live Once" (song), by The Strokes, 2006 "You Only Live Once", a song by Suicide Silence from their 2011 album The Black Crown "You Only Live Once", a song by Unsolved Mysteries from the album Tragic Trouble
You Only Live Once is a 1937 American crime drama film directed by Fritz Lang and starring Sylvia Sidney and Henry Fonda. Considered an early film noir , [ 3 ] the film was the second directed by Lang in the United States. [ 4 ]
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
The phrase "you only live once" is commonly attributed to Mae West, [27] [28] but variations of the phrase have been in use for over 100 years, [29] including as far back as (the German equivalent of) "one lives but once in the world" by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe in the play Clavigo in 1774, [30] and as the title of a waltz Man lebt nur einmal!