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"Nothing Else Matters" is a power ballad by American heavy metal band Metallica. [1] It was released in 1992 as the third single from their self-titled fifth studio album, Metallica . The song peaked at number 11 on the Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks chart, number 6 on the UK Singles Chart , number 1 in Denmark, and reached the top ten on ...
Brent Ray Jones (born May 7, 1966) is an American gospel musician, pianist, and choir conductor.He started his music career in 1999, with the release of Brent Jones & the T.P. Mobb under Holy Roller Entertainment, which charted on three Billboard magazine charts.
Jungle Cruise (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is the soundtrack album to the 2021 film Jungle Cruise, featuring original score composed by James Newton Howard.In addition to the score, a re-written film version of "Nothing Else Matters" performed by Metallica, from their 1991 studio album Black Album, was featured in the film and in the soundtrack.
Nothing Else Matters" is a 1992 song by Metallica. Nothing Else Matters may also refer to: Nothing Else Matters, 1920; Nothing Else Matters, by Marvin Sapp in 1999 "Nothing Else Matters", a song by Little Mix from Glory Days "Nothing Else Matters", a song by Lionel Richie from Louder Than Words
For his second performance of the evening, Beloate did a solo rendition of the Tom Jones classic "I (Who Have Nothing)." Originally an Italian language song, Jones' 1970 version became a Top 20 ...
Here, a breakdown of the lyrics and what we know about how Swift’s real life may have inspired them. Listen to the song below, too: You say, “I don't understand” and I say, “I know you don ...
The music video to "Every Rose Has Its Thorn" was directed by Marty Callner. It starts out with a forlorn Bret Michaels in bed with a young woman, they both look unhappy. He gets up, does the heavy sigh that is at the start of the song and walks away to play the acoustic guitar, the video then goes into video clips of the band's tour.
The billboards belonged to 26-year-old singer-songwriter Brent Faiyaz; the album in question was "Wasteland," a cautionary, R&B-trap opera deriding fame in a time of social and political upheaval.