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That year, "Easy on Me" also received the Gaffa Award for Foreign Song of the Year, [66] the Juno Award for Video of the Year, [67] and the New Music Award for Top 40/CHR Song of the Year. [68] At the 65th Annual Grammy Awards in 2023, the song won Best Pop Solo Performance and was nominated for Record of the Year , Song of the Year , and Best ...
Easy" is a progressive house song. [6] An anime-like music video [6] to accompany the release of "Easy" was first released onto YouTube on 8 March 2013 at a total length of three minutes and thirty-four seconds. [7] The creators of this video were the animation group, The Line. [8] The video follows a pop star by the name of Maki.
"Easy" is a song by American band Commodores from their fifth studio album, Commodores (1977), released on the Motown label. Group member Lionel Richie wrote "Easy" with the intention of it becoming another crossover hit for the group given the success of a previous single, "Just to Be Close to You", which spent two weeks at number one on the US Billboard Hot Soul Singles chart (now known as ...
According to Baron-Gracie, "Easy" is the "feel good love song" on the album. [5] "I feel like love is the most universal and most powerful emotion we experience," Baron-Gracie later explained in an interview with Apple Music. "Love can drive you to do crazy things [and "Easy" is] about how euphoric and uplifting love made me feel." [6]
Porter re-wrote it for the 1936 film Born to Dance, where it was introduced by Eleanor Powell, James Stewart, and Frances Langford under its alternate title, "Easy to Love". The song was later added to the 1987 and 2011 revivals of Anything Goes under the complete title "You’d Be So Easy to Love".
"Easy Come, Easy Go" is a song written by Aaron Barker and Dean Dillon, and recorded by American country music artist George Strait. It was released in August 1993 as the lead single from his album of the same title.
The first version of the song was recorded with "Eric Burdon's Fire Dept." in April 1980 in France. It was released as a single and peaked No. 11 in Austria. In 1981, Burdon recorded a different rendition, released on the 1983 album Power Company. In 1992 another version, recorded 1981, was released on The Unreleased Eric Burdon. [1]
Sherman's version spent 14 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, peaking at No. 9, [5] while reaching No. 2 on Billboard ' s Easy Listening chart. [6] [7] In Canada, the song reached No. 6 on the "RPM 100", [8] No. 7 on RPM ' s adult contemporary chart, [9] and No. 2 on Toronto's CHUM 30 chart. [10] The song earned Sherman a gold record. [11]