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"Jack & Diane" is a song written and performed by American singer-songwriter John Mellencamp, then performing as "John Cougar." ... Samples American singer ...
It contains a sample of singer-songwriter John Mellencamp's "Jack & Diane" (1982) and was released as the album's third and final single in mid-2000; in Japan, it was issued as the album's second single in February 2000. The single reached the top 10 in Australia and Canada and the top 20 in Iceland, New Zealand, Scotland and the United Kingdom.
The next day, Diane hangs out in the store where Jack works with one of Jack's friends, Chris, to Jack's annoyance. Jack asks Diane to leave, but Diane challenges her to a childish game. Jack wins, so Diane is forced to go. Jack returns to Chris, who has found a video of Diane's sister being raped on an adult website.
Mick Ronson – guitar and background vocals on "Jack and Diane" Toby Myers – bass, background vocals; Carroll Sue Hill – keyboards, background vocals; Greg Edward – engineer; David Thoener – engineer on "Pink Houses" Sarah Flint – background vocals on "R.O.C.K. in the U.S.A." John Cascella – keyboards, accordion; Lisa Germano ...
"Jack and Diane" Bruce Gowers 1983 "Crumblin' Down" Chris Gabrin 1983 "Pink Houses" Chris Gabrin 1984 "Authority Song" Jay Dubin 1985 "Lonely Ol' Night" Jonathan Kaplan 1985 "Small Town" Jonathan Kaplan 1986 "R.O.C.K. in the USA (A Salute to '60s Rock)" John Mellencamp 1986 "Rain on the Scarecrow" Jonathan Kaplan 1986 "Rumbleseat" Faye Cummins
EXCLUSIVE: Carlo Mendez (Parks and Recreation, 90210) will take over Alvaro Orlando’s role in the indie The Legend of Jack and Diane, following Orlando’s departure due to a scheduling conflict.
Jack Harlow turned a retro sample into a No. 1 single with 2022’s “First Class” — which flips Fergie’s “Glamorous” — and did the same earlier this year with “Lovin on Me,” a ...
The song is a tribute to John Mellencamp's 1982 single "Jack & Diane", and credits Mellencamp as a co-writer for incorporating that song's guitar riff. Rolling Stone writer Chris Parton described the song: "Owen's updated version highlights the original's impact on present-day America, while a regular Joe reminisces about falling in love to the tune years before."