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Prom (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is the soundtrack to the 2011 film of the same name.The album was released by Hollywood Records on April 26, 2011, featuring several pop tracks, performed by an assortment of artists including Neon Trees, Travie McCoy, Allstar Weekend, Passion Pit, Oh Darling, Girl in a Coma, Those Dancing Days, Nolan Sotillo amongst others.
A 7-inch single of "All Is Gone" b/w "Forever" was also released; however, neither of these songs appears in the film. The soundtrack was likely not released in North America due in part to disco's sharply declining popularity in the United States by 1980. Many bootleg CD releases have also found their way onto the marketplace.
Easy" is a progressive house song. [6] An anime-like music video [6] to accompany the release of "Easy" was first released onto YouTube on 8 March 2013 at a total length of three minutes and thirty-four seconds. [7] The creators of this video were the animation group, The Line. [8] The video follows a pop star by the name of Maki.
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"Sunshine" is a song by English singer Liam Payne for the Disney and 20th Century Studios' 2021 film, Ron's Gone Wrong. [2] It was released as a single on 27 August 2021 via Capitol Records . [ 3 ] The song has amassed 15 million streams as of October 2021.
"Everything You've Done Wrong" is a song by Canadian rock band Sloan. The song was released as the second single from the band's 1996 album, One Chord to Another. It is the band's highest charted single ever in Canada, reaching #6 on Canada's RPM Singles Chart. [1] The song was nominated for "Single of the Year" at the 1998 East Coast Music ...
"Got Me Wrong" was released as a single in 1994 after being featured on Clerks. The song was included on the compilation albums Nothing Safe: Best of the Box (1999) and Music Bank (1999). An acoustic version performed on Alice in Chains' MTV Unplugged concert in 1996 was released on a live album and DVD.
A 1965 Billboard review of "Let Me Down Easy" complimented the song's "driving beat" and LaVette's "outstanding wailing vocal performance." [9] In 2006, music journalist Bill Friskics-Warren described it as "a gloriously anguished record aggravated by nagging syncopation, astringent strings, and a stinging blues guitar break". [10]