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"Sunday" is a 1926 song written by Chester Conn, with lyrics by Jule Styne, Bennie Krueger, and Ned Miller, which has become a jazz standard recorded by many artists.The tune has been fitted out to various lyrics, but best known in the original version of British-American songwriter Jule Styne: "I'm blue every Monday, thinking over Sunday, that one day that I'm with you"
"Sunday" was available as free download at the band website on August 21, 2003, [1] and it made its radio debut at the end of August. [2] The song did relatively well for a debut single for a new band. It reached the top 30 in both the Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks and the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks. [3]
In January 2007, the band said they had composed 12 songs for their second album. [10] Around this time, the group demoed a handful of songs for Paul Leavitt. [11] The band began recording on April 17, 2007, with producers Matt Squire and Leavitt [12] at SOMD Studios in Beltsville, Maryland. [11]
The Music Network said "The track is a feel-good bop inspired by her childhood memories and the pleasures of 'chilling on a Sunday afternoon'." [6] Women in Pop said "The song is a lively, rollicking mix of funk, R&B and pop with some jazzy vibes thrown in, held together by a passionate vocal performance from Mauboy."
Sunday, Monday or Always" is a 1943 popular song with music by Jimmy Van Heusen and lyrics by Johnny Burke. The biggest hit version, recorded by Bing Crosby with the Ken Darby Singers on July 2, 1943, [ 1 ] and appearing in his film Dixie , was made during a musician's strike , and recorded with a vocal group background instead of an orchestra ...
Here, in the order they were released, are 10 essential Kristofferson songs — his own recordings, those made by other singers and one selection that gives an idea of the lyricism he admired. 1 ...
Recently, Reddit user u/ProducePete pointed out this funny phenomenon in r/Music, saying: "I was playing a ‘name that tune’ type game the other day, and ‘Tainted Love’ came on.
Connie Francis sings "Never on Sunday" (full title as on cover: Connie Francis sings "Never on Sunday" and Other Title Songs From Motion Pictures) is a studio album of songs from motion pictures recorded by U. S. Entertainer Connie Francis: "Anna" (a. k. a. "El bayon", a. k. a. "El negro zumbón") from the 1951 film Anna