Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The song features a guitar vamp, [2] as well as "rattling drums and chiming strings" [3] and a nursery rhyme chorus is sung by Mashonda. [2] [4] Eve declares her love and fidelity to a man, [4] [5] in a relationship that involves "bail money happily paid and secrets kept". [5]
"I Got a Man" is a song by American hip hop rapper Positive K. It was released in December 1992 as the first single from his debut album The Skills Dat Pay Da Bills.
During 2006 two University of Wisconsin–Madison employees, one a Vietnam veteran, began an in-depth survey of hundreds of Vietnam veterans, and found that "We Gotta Get Out of This Place" had resonated the strongest among all the music popular then: "We had absolute unanimity is this song being the touchstone. This was the Vietnam anthem.
"Chanté's Got a Man" is a song by American singer Chanté Moore. It was written by Moore, Big Jim Wright, and duo Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis for her third studio album, This Moment Is Mine (1999). The song features an interpolation of the 1971 Osmonds song "One Bad Apple," written by George Jackson. [1]
"Everybody's Gotta Live" is a song written by the American musician Arthur Lee. It was performed by Lee and released as a single in June 1972, coupled with the track "Love Jumped Through My Window"; [1] both tracks also appeared that year on Lee's album Vindicator.
"What a Man Gotta Do" is a song by American group Jonas Brothers. It was released as a single through Republic Records on January 17, 2020. All three of the Jonas Brothers members, Nick , Joe , and Kevin Jonas , wrote the song with producers Ryan Tedder and David Stewart , alongside Jess Agombar.
"Something's Gotta Give" is a popular song with words and music by Johnny Mercer in 1954. [1] It was published in 1955.It was written for and first performed by Fred Astaire in the 1955 musical film Daddy Long Legs, and was nominated the same year for an Academy Award for Best Original Song, losing to "Love is a Many Splendored Thing" from the film of the same name.
In the last verse, the lyrics take a more sinister turn. [4] Saw an animal as smooth as glass Slithering his way through the grass Saw him disappear by a tree near a lake. The verse ends there, with the music hanging and the lyrics avoiding naming the snake. [4] [3] In concert, Dylan sometimes elaborated on the meaning of the snake to him at ...