Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"Don't Blame Me" is a song by the American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift from her sixth studio album, Reputation (2017). Written by Swift and the song's producers, Max Martin and Shellback, "Don't Blame Me" combines electropop, EDM, and gospel pop. Its production is driven by heavy bass, pulsing synthesizers, and manipulated vocals. The lyrics ...
Don't Blame Me" is a popular song with music by Jimmy McHugh and lyrics by Dorothy Fields. The song was part of the 1932 show Clowns in Clover and was published in 1933. Popular versions that year were recorded by: Ethel Waters (US No. 6), Guy Lombardo , and Charles Agnew .
The 2002 reissue of No More Tears featured two additional tracks entitled "Don't Blame Me" and "Party with the Animals". Both tracks had originally been released in 1991 as B-sides. The version of "Don't Blame Me" on the 2002 reissue contains a different set of lyrics than the original b-side.
The single peaked at number one on the Billboard Hot 100 in just its second week of charting, with the biggest single-week sales and streaming figures of 2017 in the United States [95] and was Swift's first number one on the UK Singles Chart; [96] its music video broke the record for the most 24-hour views on YouTube. [97]
Don't Blame Me may refer to: Don't Blame Me, an Australian children's program; Don't Blame Me; Don't Blame Me by Marc Ribot "Don't Blame Me" (Dorothy Fields and Jimmy McHugh song), first published in 1933 "Don't Blame Me" (Taylor Swift song), from the album Reputation (2017) "Don't Blame Me", a song by Little River Band from Playing to Win
"Not That Funny" was derived from an unused Buckingham song titled "Needles and Pins", originally recorded in June 1978. "Needles and Pins" later split into two different songs, "Not That Funny" and "I Know I'm Not Wrong", both of which share the "don't blame me" lyrics found in the chorus and the "here comes the nighttime" lyrics found in the bridge.
Image credits: milwbrewsox #7. My wife and I have this ceiling fan/light in our bedroom in the house we moved into two years ago. It has a remote control for the fan and lights.
In a review for Consequence of Sound, Jeoff Nelson found the song a failed attempt at "that bigger, wider, and louder" sound in pop music, calling it an inferior version of Lorde's 2017 album Melodrama. [35] On a positive side, Time 's Raise Bruner complimented the lyrics for featuring "blazing imagery". [15]