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Paul Richard Epworth (born 25 July 1974) is an English record producer, songwriter, musician, and remixer. He has worked with artists including Adele , Florence and the Machine , Rihanna , and Maxïmo Park , among many others.
Pages in category "Songs written by Paul Epworth" The following 40 pages are in this category, out of 40 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
The following songs have been produced by Paul Epworth. Pages in category "Song recordings produced by Paul Epworth" The following 64 pages are in this category, out of 64 total.
Adele released "Skyfall" in October 2012, a song co-written with Epworth for the James Bond film of the same name. [10] Her third album, 25, was released in 2015. Adele co-wrote its songs "I Miss You" and "Sweetest Devotion" with Epworth and co-wrote "Hello", "Million Years Ago", and "Water Under the Bridge" with Greg Kurstin.
A greatest hits album is a compilation album of successful, previously released songs by a particular music artist or band. Albums entitled Greatest Hits, or similar titles, listed alphabetically by band name or artist's last name, include:
Paul Epworth: Unorthodox Jukebox: 2012 [10] "Nothin' on You" B.o.B (featuring Bruno Mars) Bobby Simmons Jr. Bruno Mars Philip Lawrence Ari Levine B.o.B Presents: The Adventures of Bobby Ray: 2009 [45] "Old & Crazy" Bruno Mars (featuring Esperanza Spalding) Bruno Mars Jeff Bhasker Unorthodox Jukebox: 2012 [10] "One At a Time" † Travie McCoy ...
Paul Epworth How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful: 2015 [5] "My Boy Builds Coffins" Florence Welch Christopher Lloyd Hayden Rob Ackroyd Lungs: 2009 [4] "My Love" † Florence Welch Dave Bayley. Dance Fever: 2022 [3] "Never Let Me Go" † Florence Welch Paul Epworth Ceremonials: 2011 [2] "No Choir" Florence Welch Emile Haynie Andrew Wyatt: High as ...
[75] Songs of Innocence was made available to more than 500 million iTunes customers in 119 countries, for what Cook marketed as "the largest album release of all time". [80] Apple CEO Tim Cook and the members of U2 on stage during the album's announcement. Bono rejected the notion that U2 had given the album away at no cost, saying: "We were paid.