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"Just a Song Before I Go" is a song by Crosby, Stills & Nash that appeared on the 1977 album CSN. It was also released as a single and reached number 7 on the Billboard Hot 100 for two consecutive weeks ending August 27 and September 3, 1977, [1] becoming the band's highest-charting hit. It is also one of the band's shortest songs, with a ...
The same song became a Top 40 Country hit for Juice Newton in 1984.) Davis also reached No. 35 in September 1976 with "Superstar", a tribute song not related to any of the 1971 hits by that name. [2] Davis had his first American Top 10 single with the ballad "I Go Crazy", which after 30 weeks on the Hot 100 peaked at No. 7 on March 18, 1978. [2] "
It was the first single released from his 1977 album Singer of Songs: Teller of Tales, and his second-highest peaking pop hit, peaking at #7 on the Billboard chart in 1978. The song entered the Hot 100 on August 27, 1977 and began slowly climbing, peaking in March and April 1978, before dropping off the chart the week after May 27, 1978.
"Helpless" is a song written by Canadian singer-songwriter Neil Young, recorded by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young (CSNY) on their 1970 album Déjà Vu. Young played the song with The Band in the group's final concert with its original lineup, The Last Waltz , on American Thanksgiving Day 1976 at San Francisco's Winterland Ballroom , with Joni ...
The song had grown from a 1977 collaboration with punk-minded Ohio art-rockers Devo, and found Young ruminating on rock’n’roll’s youth-orientated built-in obsolescence, deciding “It’s ...
In June 2022, singer Kate Bush told BBC Radio 4 that she hadn’t listened to her 1985 song “Running Up That Hill” for “a really long time.” She hadn’t even performed it live since 2014 ...
Canadian Zephyr was a Canadian country music group. Twenty of their singles made the RPM Country Tracks charts, including the number one singles "You Made My Day Tonight" [1] and "Guess I Went Crazy."
Before an official release, “Crazy Bitch” gained traction on MySpace. Radio stations made their own FCC-approved edits so they could play the song. “Then,” Todd says, “everybody wanted ...