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Dreaming of You" became one of Selena's most widely recognized recordings. [42] [43] The song won a BMI Pop Music Award for having two million airplay impressions in the United States. [44] "Dreaming of You" was featured on Bruce Pollock's book The 7500 Most Important Songs for the Rock and Roll Era in 2014. [45]
The line "You are the girl, that I've been dreaming of, ever since I was a little girl" is based on an inside joke between Reggie and his sister Ali Youngblood where they would refer to wanting something as "Ever since I was a little girl". [4]
Dreaming of You is the fifth and final studio album by American singer Selena.Released posthumously on July 18, 1995, by EMI Latin and EMI Records, it was an immediate commercial and critical success, debuting atop the United States Billboard 200—the first predominately Spanish-language album to do so.
"Dreamin' of You" is a song by Bob Dylan recorded in January 1997 during the sessions for Time Out of Mind but not released until 2008. In that year, the song was featured on Dylan's The Bootleg Series Vol. 8 – Tell Tale Signs collection, [1] and released as a single. A promotional music video, which starred Harry Dean Stanton, [2] premiered ...
Dreaming of You (Juris album) (2012) or its title song "Dreaming of You" (The Coral song) (2002) "Dreamin' of You" (Celine Dion song) (1996) "Dreamin' of You" (Bob Dylan song), an out-take from the 1997 album Time Out Of Mind "Dreamin' of You", a 2013 song by Buckcherry from Confessions "Dreaming of You", a 2012 song by Cigarettes After Sex ...
The song has been covered by many artists including Bria Salmena, Emmylou Harris and Rodney Crowell, Cowboy Jack Clement, Cowboy Junkies, Alison Krauss, Jamey Johnson, Crystal Gayle, Patty Loveless, Martina McBride, Mark Chesnutt, John Prine and Kathy Mattea, Marianne Faithfull, Jewel, Collin Raye, and Charles Esten.A version of the song was ...
The song has been described as a mid-tempo [4] power ballad. [1] [5] [6] The song opens with somber, clean guitar notes set to a light backing beat and Chad Kroeger's "gritty croon". [5] The song's power builds over the course of the verses and bridge, until the chorus erupts as a "fiery rock anthem". [1]
Chuck Taylor from Billboard described the song as a "string-laden, gently produced ballad". [1] Another editor deemed it a "dreamy love song" with lyrics that "drool sentimentality and dedication". [1] The New York Times called it a "confectionary love song". [3] The Importance of Being Barbra deemed the song "somewhat forgettable". [5]