Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"Ain't Nobody" is a song by American funk band Rufus and American singer Chaka Khan. It was released on November 4, 1983, by Warner Bros. , as one of four studio tracks included on their live album, Stompin' at the Savoy (1983).
The song was released on September 30, 2022, as the second single from his first live album, God Is Good! (2022). [1] Carnes co-wrote the song with Brandon Lake and Hank Bentley. [2] The single was produced by Aaron Robertson, Austin Davis, Hank Bentley, and Jeff Pardo. "Ain't Nobody" peaked at No. 5 on the US Hot Christian Songs chart.
"I Ain't Got Nobody" (sometimes referred to as "I'm So Sad and Lonely" or "I Ain't Got Nobody Much") is a popular song copyrighted in 1915. It was first recorded by Marion Harris , and became a perennial standard , recorded many times over the following generations, in styles ranging from pop to jazz to country music .
"Ain't Nobody" was written by Evans, Sean Combs and Chucky Thompson and produced by Combs and Thompson for her debut studio album Faith (1995). [2] Thompson said it was influenced by the song "Can't Let Her Get Away" by Michael Jackson from his 1991 album Dangerous, telling Soul Culture in 2014: "I took some pieces from that record, but I took from the soul vibe that we had going on at Bad Boy.
The music features a simple melodic sequence, but nonetheless has a clever harmonic construction that highlights the mixed emotions in the lyrics, adding a nostalgic, bittersweet effect. The success of the song prompted publishers Chappell & Co. to buy the rights and order an English version from Irving Caesar , a very popular lyricist of the time.
Jordan's hit song popularized the expression "Nobody here but us chickens", but the phrase is older. [4] Its first known appearance was a joke published as a reader-submitted anecdote in Everybody's Magazine in 1908 regarding a chicken thief, formulated as, " 'Deed, sah, dey ain't nobody hyah 'ceptin' us chickens."
"Ain't Nobody" is an R&B/hip hop soul mid-tempo song produced by Dallas Austin for American R&B singer Monica. It was featured on the Nutty Professor official soundtrack, and also was released as Miss Thang ' s fourth and final single on a double A-side with "Why I Love You So Much" on May 20, 1996.
"Ain't Nobody's Business" (originally "Tain't Nobody's Biz-ness if I Do") is a 1920s blues song that became one of the first blues standards. [1] It was published in 1922 by Porter Grainger and Everett Robbins. [1] The song features a lyrical theme of freedom of choice and a vaudeville jazz–style musical arrangement. [2]