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"Corduroy" is a song by the American alternative rock band Pearl Jam. The song is the eighth track on the band's third studio album, Vitalogy (1994). Despite the lack of a commercial single release, the song managed to reach number 13 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart.
Kevin Beacham is known for organizing the Scribble Jam battles from 1997 to 2009. He first got his start in radio in April 1995 on WNUR 89.3 at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois . His show "Time Travel" was a conceptual hip-hop show that used the music as a medium to educate listeners about the culture of hip hop, the artists and ...
The album was recorded primarily in the United States at Prince's Paisley Park Studios outside Minneapolis. Memorial Beach featured three UK Top 50 singles for the band, "Move to Memphis" (released as a single in 1991, almost two years before the album), "Dark is the Night for all" and "Angel in the Snow".
"National Express" is a song by Northern Irish band the Divine Comedy. On 25 January 1999, it was released as the third single from their sixth album, Fin de Siècle (1998), and reached number eight on the UK Singles Chart and number 18 in Ireland.
His national tours include “Zorba,” “Funny Girl,” and “The Full Monty.” More: Trinity's 'A Christmas Carol' has a new home for 2024. What you need to know
Commercially, the song debuted at number one on the Billboard Hot 100, marking Megan Thee Stallion's third number-one single as well as her first as a solo artist. It debuted at number one on the Billboard Global 200 , where it became her second number-one single, and made Megan Thee Stallion the first lead female rapper to debut atop the chart.
"Broken" is a song by American alternative band Lifehouse. It is the third single released from their fourth studio album, Who We Are (2007). Lead singer Jason Wade was inspired to write the song after he visited a friend in Nashville who needed a kidney transplant.
The song is about Waters' frustration with the leadership of the world since World War II, [5] mentioning many world leaders by name (Ronald Reagan, Alexander Haig, Menachem Begin, Margaret Thatcher, Ian Paisley, Leonid Brezhnev, Joseph McCarthy and Richard Nixon), suggesting that these "colonial wasters of life and limb" be segregated into a specially-founded retirement home.