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"Can't Change Me" was released in early 1999 and turned out to be the biggest hit from the album, achieving strong chart positions. "Can't Change Me" was the first Cornell single to chart, peaking on the Mainstream Rock Tracks chart at No. 5 and on the Modern Rock Tracks chart at No. 7.
He released one live album, titled Songbook. Cornell made numerous soundtrack contributions and released nineteen singles. With Soundgarden, he produced six albums, five EPs, and two greatest hits compilations. He released three albums with Audioslave and one with Temple of the Dog. Cornell also co-produced the Screaming Trees album Uncle ...
The album is a soundtrack to the book Neil released in the same year, Tattoos & Tequila: To Hell and Back with One of Rock's Most Notorious Frontmen. Each song on the album corresponds with a chapter in the book. [15] The album's title track was released as a single for the album and features a music video. [16]
"Changes" is a song by the English musician David Bowie from his 1971 album Hunky Dory. RCA Records then released it as a single from the album on 7 January 1972. Written following his promotional tour of America in early 1971, "Changes" was recorded at Trident Studios in London between June and July that year.
No One Sings Like You Anymore, Vol. 1 is the fifth studio album by Chris Cornell, released posthumously without prior announcement by his estate and Universal Music Enterprises, on December 11, 2020. It consists of ten covers sequenced and recorded by Cornell in 2016, including Harry Nilsson 's " Jump into the Fire ", John Lennon 's " Watching ...
Can't Take Me Home did much better in Australia, where it peaked at the tenth spot on the national album chart [56] and topped the Australian R&B Albums chart. [57] It was the 32 best-selling album in Australia during 2000 [ 58 ] and eventually it was certified double platinum by ARIA for shipments of 140 thousand copies in country. [ 59 ]
"You Can't Change Me" is the second single from Roger Sanchez's album First Contact (2001). The song features Armand Van Helden and N'Dea Davenport . Personnel
Robert Hilburn of the Los Angeles Times called "You Can't Change That" a "good natured" tune that's one of "the album's high points". [5] Craig Lytle of AllMusic also called the song "a laid-back yet very danceable track; it features the vocals of the mild-tempered Ray Parker Jr. and the distinctive tenor of Arnell Carmichael."