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The music video was nominated for Best Hard Rock Video at the 1996 MTV Video Music Awards. [9] The video is available on the home video release Music Bank: The Videos, and is the final Alice in Chains music video that Layne Staley filmed with the band (the "Get Born Again" music video released in 1999 featured only archived footage of the singer).
Bruce Springsteen's bout with peptic ulcer disease made him doubt if he would ever sing again, said the Boss Thursday, March 21, on SiriusXM's E Street Radio with Jim Rotolo. “I had the stomach ...
"When Can I See You Again?" is an uptempo dance-pop and synth-pop single. [4] [5] It features Young's "light vocals over a bed of pounding drums and twinkly synths". [4] Young told AOL Music, "As a huge fan of Disney animation films growing up, it was a real honor to write 'When Can I See You Again' for Wreck-It Ralph. I felt like it was really ...
The song was featured in the 2002 Australian comedy Crackerjack. It has also been referenced in the Axis of Awesome 's song medley " Four Chord Song ", a reference to the fact that the chord progression in "Cigarettes Will Kill You" is similar to that of Journey 's " Don't Stop Believin' " and Toto 's " Africa ".
Life'll Kill Ya is the tenth studio album by American singer-songwriter Warren Zevon. The album was released on January 25, 2000, by Artemis Records . It was later hailed in Rolling Stone as his best work since Excitable Boy .
With the film If Ever I See You Again quickly proving a massive flop, Flack's single was left to fare on its own merit, and did in July 1978 spend three weeks at No. 1 on the Easy Listening chart with an eventual ranking as the #8 Easy Listening hit for the year: however, while reaching the Top 40 on both the Pop-oriented Hot 100 and the R&B chart, "If Ever I See You Again" was not on either ...
The album consists predominantly of originals by members of the band. The songs "Lands End", by tenor saxophonist Harold Land, and "Sandu", by Brown, have gone on to become jazz standards. The song "George's Dilemma" is also known as "Ulcer Department". [6] Brown's solo on "Cherokee" is among the most acclaimed solos in jazz. [7]
A music video was made for the song. At the beginning, lead vocalist Brett Scallions sits across a man with a cane and starts singing. The scene then changes to a woman who suffers various misfortunes, including spilling her coffee, breaking a heel on the sidewalk, and getting into a car accident. Throughout these scenes, Scallions becomes more ...