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Lynch co-wrote "Thinking 'Bout You" with Andy Albert, Hunter Phelps, and Will Weatherly for his fourth studio album, Tullahoma. The song is structured as a "call-and-response" conversation between ex-partners and represents the first true duet Lynch has recorded. [4] It was originally recorded as a duet between Lynch and Lauren Alaina.
The music video for "Thinking 'Bout You" was directed by Jake Jelicich and premiered on Lipa's YouTube channel on 22 February 2017. [32] It is a split screen visual, nodding to Requiem for a Dream (2000), directed by Darren Aronofsky . [ 42 ]
The video was directed by Tim Story and debuted on April 1, 1999, during an episode of TRL. The version of the video featured on 'N the Mix is adjusted to feature the US version of the song. [1] The video shows members of the band in an asylum, Camarillo State Mental Hospital, which closed in 1997. The viewer gets to see each man's torment as ...
"Thinking About You" is a song recorded by American singer-songwriter Norah Jones for her third studio album Not Too Late (2007). It was written by Jones and Ilhan Ersahin, and produced by Lee Alexander. The song was released as the lead single from Not Too Late on December 5, 2006, by Blue Note Records.
"Thinkin' Problem" is a moderate up-tempo with electric guitar, pedal steel guitar, and fiddle flourishes. In it, the male narrator states that he has a "thinkin' problem" (meant as a play on the term "drinking problem") because he is constantly thinking about his former significant other despite numerous attempts to quit.
The song peaked at number 29 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, becoming the album's only single not to reach the Top 10 in the United States. It peaked at number 27 in the United Kingdom. There are two music videos released for the song. The first was released in 2007 and features Perry in two different rooms—black and white—and was directed ...
"Been Thinking" is an amapiano and pop infused song, [3] which incorporates house and disco, [4] and has elements of R&B and afrobeats. [5] Tyla recorded the song on her first trip to the United States and she had a feeling of great pleasure as she recorded in the same studio Michael Jackson recorded his music in, she went on to state that: [6]
The song was released as the album's second single in November 1994 and emergd as Usher highest-charting song up to then: It became his first top ten hit on the US Billboard Hot R&B Singles chart, reaching number eight, while also peaking at number 58 on the Billboard Hot 100, and at number 70 on the UK Singles Chart.