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"Love Don't Live Here Anymore" has been covered by a number of artists, including Madonna, Morrissey–Mullen, Billy Idol, Jimmy Nail, and Faith Evans. Madonna's version was included in her second studio album Like a Virgin (1984), and it was the idea of Michael Ostin, the head of the A&R department of Warner Bros. Records, that Madonna record ...
"Love Don't Live Here" is the debut single recorded by American country music trio Lady Antebellum, released in October 2007 from their self-titled debut album. Although the group had charted along with pop artist Jim Brickman on his 2007 single " Never Alone ", this song serves as Lady Antebellum's first release to country radio.
William Thomas of Empire said We Don't Live Here Anymore lacked the wit of the former, [8] while The List ' s Kaleem Aftab said We Don't Live Here is the better of the two films, adding "it's the relationship that doesn't involve sex between Jack and Hank that is the real clincher. Their games of one-upmanship and bravado fizzle with a kinetic ...
Love Don't Live Here Anymore" is a 1978 song by Rose Royce, later covered by a number of artists. Love Don't Live Here Anymore may also refer to: "Love Don't Live Here Anymore", a 1999 song by Kenny Rogers from She Rides Wild Horses "Love Don't Live Here Anymore", a 1978 song by Kris Kristofferson and Rita Coolidge from Natural Act
Love Don't Live Here may refer to: "Love Don't Live Here" (Lady Antebellum song), a 2007 single by Lady Antebellum "Love Don't Live Here" (Bananarama song), a 2010 single by Bananarama "Love Don't Live Here", a 2008 song by Ladyhawke from Ladyhawke; Love Don't Live Here, a 2016 album by Lionheart
In Socorro, New Mexico, Alice Hyatt's husband, Donald, a Coca-Cola delivery driver, is killed on the job in a traffic accident. A former singer, Alice sells most of her belongings, intending to take her son, Tommy, to her childhood home of Monterey, California, where she hopes to pursue the singing career she abandoned when she married Donald.
"Love Don't Live Here Anymore" is the only ballad on the album, as well as the most soulful. [29] The song echoes back to Philadelphia soul, and features acoustic guitar and synth strings on the first half. [25] [7] Lyrically, it is about a woman being abandoned and "emptied of love". [32]
She Rides Wild Horses is the twenty-third studio album by American country music singer Kenny Rogers.It was released in 1999 on his own Dreamcatcher Records label. The album includes the singles "The Greatest," "Slow Dance More" and "Buy Me a Rose," which all charted on the Billboard country singles charts, giving Rogers' best success on that chart since 1991.